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have died out ir THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SATURDAY JULY 3, 1888 1 GRIO. N BHIOUOBKTS, REAL ESTATE BROKER, 1616 HOWARD STRHEHRAT. Offers for sale the following bargains in Omaha property: y resorved by Me. Hanscom, and now fr hoice residenco proper The finest lots in HANSCOM PLACE, or weed on the market as th f Omaha egant just on grade. Magnificent view, near street cars, park, and sure ounded by beautiful homes and a splendid clase of peo ty substantial houses cost 2,000 to 10,000 each, will be built this scason in the immediate vicinity, Wil t PRICES AND TERMS THAT FLACE TilEM WITHIN THE EACH OF ALL who desire “Hand- scme Homes,”” And for investment, these lots cannot be excelled, as their location, natural advantages and the great numberof costly houses to be ereeted will cause them (o advance rapidly in price during the next sis months. Also offer 8 beantiful cust front lots in Marsh's Addition, near corner 25th and Leavenworth, one block from street cars, pavement, St. Mary's Avenue and charch, covered with fine shade trees; each $2,800. Seven lne east front lots in Leaveuworth Terrace; two blocks from Belt Line railway depot on Leavenworth streot; lots around aro se for $700 to $900; can offer these lots for a few days only at $550 each. Two south frout lots in Clifton Place, three blocks from street cars, one block from Leavenworth street, with its proposed grading, paving and Cable Line, covered with large onk and maple trees—a big bargain—the two at 2,400, Eight lots in Burr Oak, convenient to str s and railroad, at $800 to §000. Two lots fronting south on Leavenworth street, cach 61 feet front, one a corner, will be valuable business property in one year, the two for $1,500. Two acres in West Omaha, will make ton of these lots to center of town make them good lots, high and sightly location, splendid neighborhood; lots beyond are seliing for $1,000 and $1,200; can sell the two acres if sold at once for 7,000 Some nice lots in Hawthorne, near Thirty-third and Davenport; the nearr especailly desirable investments at §9)0. Five lots, one a corner, on Lowe avenue, near Dodge street, high and healthy location, splendid place for a home, yery easy terms, only $1,100 each. Six lots in Hartford Place, just this side of new M. P. depot and eanning factory, cheapest property in the market, only $300; $10 down, $10 per month, Two lots, one a corner, in Shinn's 2nd addition, if sold quick, the two only $1,600. A few choice lots in Ambler Place, Thornburg, East Side, Clark’s Place, Walnut Hill, Washington Iill, West Ead, Orehard Hill and other NEXTTEN DAYS THE FINEST EIGHT-ROOM COTTAGE AND ST FRONT LOT IN HANSCOM PLACE, ON GEORGIA AVENUE, IF SOLD QUICK. Also several six-room cottagos with cistern and eity water, slate mav favonite additions, Also offer ELEGANT NEIGHBORHOOD,CITY AND CISTERN WAT between Fourteenth and Fifteenh str go list of improved residence property, ranging in price from $2,000 to $6,000. CAN OFFER FOR THE IR, A PERFECT GEM OF A HOME, ONLY $ tion, only $2, 0; $250 cash, $25 per month. 44-foot front on Harney, sts, at $2,000; first-class location for business, 66 feet on Howard, near Thirteenth street, only 18,000; easy terms: splendid site for wholesale or warchouss purposes. 166-foot front on Capitol avenue, next to Masonic Block. 1s spiendid businoess zest bargain in Omaha if sold soon. Also offer two sections of property and rapidly improving; has eight brick stores all rented; can make this the bi, co farm land in Howard county, near good railvond station and St, Paul, the county seat, a town of 2,000 inhabitants, No better soil 2 a fow of the ba ins [ ¢ 1n the state; can plow overy acres; urrounded by a good cluss of people and cultivated farms. Can offer this land for the next thirty days ata low figure and remarkably easy terms, The above or for sale. Investors, and espocially parties from outside the city will do well to consult the list of property I offer before buying elsewhere. 1 T U]\T \\TI\L L\IDL\LE find that it had been recently discharged. | of the tinker's story, and Throop was ais THE DRESSED BEEF TRADE. number of cars would make & train 180 | as cook and laundryman. Ho was a very { his guilt, and pursuit was instantly made SLANMLE A « | In hopes to exculy: her father, she set | charged from custody and the other g % | miles in length, each two rods represent- | willing hand, and when his work at the | und w hot five oponed. Joe ran straight about and cleaned and toaded the gun. | }.,m puton trinl. He pleaded guilty, | 1t8 Growth in Chicago to Colossal | i, o thirty-two cattlo. These facts indi- | house was finished he stood ready to help | for a clifl about ‘thirty feet high, and as ) In the course of a few hours she w lm out judge and jury accepted his versjon Proporuons, | cate a somewhat ample fullillment of the | us ut the e, So far as speech went, | he reached the brink he threw up his A Nemesis Which Has Pursued Its Thou- | under restraint and interrogated. v | of the shooting and he received a co m Ch » Times: Twenty-one yearsago | prophesy uttered twenty years ago by the | we got no more out of him after a month | arms and went over. We picked him up. a8 to PH 1 the Gall | lieving that anything she could say | paratively short sentence. But for his- | thirty of the freight cars owned by the | Pioneer maker of refrigérator cars, 'who | than on the fiest day. He called every | off the rocks secmingly dead, and the res sands to Prison and the Gallows, in regard to the affair would react o | action inearryimg away the gun he would | 7yon Transportat & 1 s o | then declared that “tresh beef will yet be | meal supper. He article of | venge of the crowd was satistied. An —_— her father, she determined on silence, | probably have been set at liberty. Hon Aransportation & MSuranee Comd | g, pon 1o New York at all seasons, safely, | wash a shirt, Every week was | hour later, when the surgeon announced A Remarkable Case From the Records | and not one word could be got out of | - ULV, rebuilt under the direetion of | yogylarly and in considerable quanitities.” | Wednesday to him: 1 could say to him, | that Joe still lived, there was some growls WikGEHA N Lintiw Tiaoabe. s to the events of the pust three | Kures Koughs Kompietely—Red Star | W. W. Chandler, then and afterward tne | To what grand magnitade these branches | “Here, Joe, foteh a pail of water,” and | ing, but no one interfered with us as we of ‘:“"‘ 1" E :’“ 4 Ill-r«ml. uaumuJ’v nin]-nn-nl ”'{{ Cough Cure. They never come back | Chieago agent of the company named | of business will grow m]u.'- next ten or | he would take the pail and hurry | "“\“.’”“',’l""”\""=|""l ““*"i""' :""'Y to our of an Innocent Man, but was obstinately silent to all | C-— - May 16, 1865, one of those cars, carvying | twenty years no man living can safely { but if I said, w, Joe, what abin seemed to me that he was coms other ‘questions. ‘The prosecution then What False Hafr Costs, ten'tons of butter, started from this eity | foresée, mor can anyone tell what inti- | vou hail from# he would stand and stare | pletely smashed, although he had no | i Yot .| began to work up its ease of circumstan “What is the longest piece of har you | for New York. ‘Thatwas the very begin: | mate conneetions with the domestie | ut me with open mouth. ‘The miners | large bones broken ; The criminal who argues that ho is | tial evidence, and was fortunate from | over handled ™ wis asked of & San Frane | ning of the refrigerator-car systom, and | economy ot the people that growth may | played many a joke on him, and some of | On the third day after the accident Joo pafe because no one saw him commit the | the start. A person came forward who | T ki 5 5 ‘ of whusiness that has grown toenormons | have. “Even now the farmers living | 1 pretty rough ones, but nobody ever | opened his eyes, and we saw that he was | erime, forgets that circumstantial evi- | 8 lroop leave his house, gun in hand, | sold a picce of hair in Now York to | and rapidly increasing proportions. In | towns remote from Chicago, St. Louis or | saw him get angry. When we found that | L Lwenty-four hours later he | dence is a Nemesis which has pursued its | to chase the cattle. Two persons attivmed | pp " iples, a dealer thers, that was | those days” there was” almost no dairy | hansas City may eat to-day of asteak, a | he would not ‘answer questions put to | asked the surgeon where he was, what Ltk 1 ha olsoh Bid) ke that they heard the report of a rifle. | Goventy-four inches long, Fob this 1 re- | business westof Michigan and Indiand. | roast or a tenderloin fresh from the very | him verbally, we t him in writing, | had occurred, and why Davison was not thousans to the prison and 4 ul “people - had heard Throop make | Goicod® 20 an ounce ‘o was ten | People said that good butter could not be | bullocks that a fow days ago were fatten- for instance, we wrote the query, | there. Then we all Knew that our Joe Had the Preller caso in St. Louis been | s, The cleaning of tho ritle was | Jyhcos in the it He made it into a | made of milk from the prairie grasses. | ing on corn at the crib close by the farm- | here do you liver'* he would take tne | had got nhis right mind back. It was a one in which men could testify that they } charged to Throop, and made to look | (\witeh and sold it to & eustomer for 50. | No doubt the cating of weeds and ill- | house, and were sent a thousand miles, it | veneil, hout to reply, but before he | week before we questioned him, Then saw the killing done, the sensation would | ugly against him. The silence of him- | 1%} yve some hair now that is fifty odd | Mavored grasses by tht cows did much to | may be, to be slaughtered and sepa | could ‘make a mark the idea would slip loarned all Ltold you a tho outsots weok. It depended | Self and daughter was proof suflicient to | part to e eaten in European homes and ay from him, and ‘e would sadly | st thing he remembered was count- upon circumstant as m wry has been interested. The records of inches long.”” Here Mr. Sicardi showed | prevent suceess in the dairy, but the the reporter a tress of dark brown hair | drinking of impure water and breath rched from the shoulder to the | the foul airof filthy stables did more; [ and private houses —widel ‘s | and the entire want of means by which | throughout the states. Alréady ' | butter could be earcied in good condition | ber of slangh over long distanees quickly did most to | lished in the | most people that he was guilty of murder, that moncy m Chicago, B 1l lence Court was in session and the accused imk after link has been picked up to | was speedily brought to trial. To his s a completo chain the whole coun- | lawyer he divulged the episode of pur , and he admitted firing | part to be consunied in hotels, restanrants | shake his head and tarn away, One day, ev lone, and seattered | when he had been with us about six | ¥ num- | weeks, I entered the tent and saw the | When the r houses have been estab- | surgeon cutting Joe's hair, which was | ticulars eve ery midst of the pastures of | very long and unkempt and_particul that r floor when held perpendicularly he said, *'is worth £20 an oun Costs something, don't it ap ot hold of all th ybody was Miller's 1 rly 50 as tho rea | | | two | 1rs he had been likea man in his sloep. par- nd, 1 thief was { state show tha e missing her. The shot | o) at’s not s ance. | discourage the butter-makers of the west. | the plains, cach of the houses having its SIRRERS el an. | finally discovered and punished. Miller imo in every state show that whe went over her and entored n beeeh troo. | proa iyl that's not a N M el T C \\yfl”“]n\')qw‘r ehillroonss A 18 side-trioks, Whors rer | novsiu'ims fht about this follow," an- | ronfuad with s until spring, and than cumstantial evedence is soley depended | o gave his solemn word that he did not | i \yaizod ton, comparatively spoat ies for marketing, the quantity of | frigerator cars will await their e 4 R Pt set out for the mines on theupper Arkan- | on, a terribly strong case be made | McWilliams that dav. When he 1eft | 10w it was & vory small bundis, Pt | butter produced would inerease year by | becf grown on the grass round a it “Why. Uve had an idea fora month | 58 With some of our boys. 'In a camp against an entirely innoc an. That honse atter dinner it was with the in S R ORI SO S (BRV B FLIie ul it was probably to that convié- | is even confidently predicted that the day | o sy |V e a8 FEEEEOES NI | not twenty miles from us he saw and this has been done time after time we ali | tention of going to the town seve ounce, wholesale.” | t the refrigerator-car system owes | is near when men will no more think of [ D! Rl TG ble. | identified Dayison, who had been there B the ke ity of | Miles away to consult a lawyer in r B Ron o e stow away o zood many | it8 existence. T exporiment of 1863 | shipping cattle long distances alivo than | Mijuty to his head. Hore's the trouble. | tor "y your, The minors would lave know, though in the great majority O | 1oy pew snit, Ho did not find the Iwyer | ougn(dollars’ worth by onal) stmmah | Wwhs so satistactory in ita. results that in | thoy would now think of shipping sash, | 19 s recoived a blow right hore, and s | jynched the follow, but he eut sticks too cases the real eriminal gets his just de- | in s office, ind on his way home he ot | N L ehanld oo i i o s | 1995 the wumber of ice-houses on | doors and blinds in the form of {e pine | portion of the skull is ‘pressing on the | gupidly, and a weels later his dead body serts. ] to thinking the matter over, and madeup | of gwitelios hanging thero that you could | Wheels” was inereased to cighty-eight by | logsin which those things were originally. | 28 0§ anybody before this hurt b+ | Was found in & guleh (wo or three miles ome fort 0 there lived in | his mind he had been too y alla | pack in a small valise that are “worth. at | the company, which for ten years enjoyed - = oW 1oE LR o hRnEanicte away, where the Tndians had tumbled it Wisconsin a f A Throop, who | He even had some thought of oing 1o | jaugt 22,000 There is n shelf full of | & monopoly of the business' of carrying [ Nothing more painful than a sprained e A : by o | fter securing his sealp. was « widower, with a daughtor fifteen | his neighbor and holding out the lu | small hoxes of hair that is imported in | butter, eges and somo other perisliablc | nnkle, which can be eured by St.Jacobs | i) 'ah, oF Wove A4 oberition by & ¥ - vears old. The man had a good reputa- | reconciliation, but he was e ed bY | gl rolls ready to work into wigs, ete.. | Droperty from the west to the Atlantie | Oil LR C e ol Mt UL The Flower Mania, tion, and his daughter was a great favor- | the lateness ‘of the hour. This feeling | ghuy are worth on an average $12an | States. } | SR HEanmine, Maude, in_ Chi News: 'Thero is & ite in the neighborhood. For some time | accounted for his changed conduct when | oypee,» 2 One hot day, ohe of the first thirty cars | Phe Singular Story of Silent Joe. _ While that might be so, the chances for | pertect mania for” flower wearing now, Saviona Lol tite/osanrrenas whichieansed! | hocame liome; SLENS N R OR el Cen BV he VISIEGUy tbw0 || TRU e By ARy Yo ih Edmantn ol | RwaTovoxt dubious. Wo wero [ and a very charming manma it is, too, | Lis arrest, Throop had not been on good | The awyer went to the woods and A Most Liberal Offer. Chicago packerst They stood an instant | Cnarles Mitler left Hartford, Conn., for | charitable as as_our means would | Every other girl you see on the stre i terms with a farmer named MeWilliams, | found the beech tree, and dug out the | The Voltaic Belt Co., Marshall, Mich. | in their shirt-sleeves, perspiring, on the | the west. At Buffalo he fell in'with 2 mau | allow, but wo Ipoor. When Joe | heit she is Tuden with ¢ i lving about a mile away, on account of | bullet. He also found that the lawyer | offer to send their celobrated Voltaic Belt, | platform of the freight house while the 1wl th had been with us about two months a | has a big bunch of juequominot roses on | dumngo committed by cattle belonging | whom Throop went to see was out at the | and Electric Appliances on thirly days | doors of the car v opened, then o together. Miller | miner was one night robbed of his little | the front of her bodice. You must by ne | to the lattor. There had been alawsuit, | hour specitied. It w e, however, | trial o any man afilicted with ouis | stepped into the ear. “The metal walls | had about Cirsh with him, while | hoard. then a second was robbed of his | means call * these pets jacqueminots, | and Throop had said in the presence of | that while scores of men in the town | Debility, Loss of Vitality | were covered by frost two inches deep. | Davison few shillings loft | provisions; a third had his revolver | though, as I have written them You | ite i stolen; and men came to us and dec! 1 | must simply say jacks. ‘That's the cor- | witnesses that he woula like to put a bul- | knew Throop, no one could be found who | Hustrate ps let into McWilliams, One day about | re noon the and the was terr One moment in that low temperature was | when they The forme ¥ x they hurried | intended “woing to Colorado, while the | their belief that our Joe was the guilty | reet thing "It argues aiked: L | latter, who sad he wasa buteher, de- | berson. Wo could not believe this, but | ity with them, as it wer ts can't be | cided 'to r in in Chicago and work at | #greed to watch him. For several nights | has come about in the fo WG Thisy took quartors | Wo took turns at spying, but, while he | oy aphlet ombered having scen him on that | with full partieulars mailed fr convincing enough, and a attle broke into the field again | oceasion. them at once, out one of the visitors re T notified Ler father. He McWilliams aflirmed that her hus- don’t see any_reason why me enraged, and, as he started | band had left the house with his rifle to sent to New York in such cars as well as | his t Kind of fam L tim t s in wh re sent to girls, Don’t you re- with upon to drive them out, took his rifle along. | hunt squirrels in the woods, and she had %-A“v LEaiaYe, Rapontat. butter, if the temperature can be kept as | together in a cheap hotel, and, to further | did not leave the cabin, another theft was | member the dreadful -~ bouquets, The back end of the fiold bordered on & | never seen him alive again. ' Hehad been | | San Francisco Post: Mr. McRoborts, | gy ‘ad this.” reduce expenses, they oceupied one bed. | committed. ' For a month we were com- | their dozens of buds, all exaetly the same oot Gt daughtor saw her father | shot through the heade What hal become | ROW editor of the Leeds (England) Me He was assured that as long as ice and | On the night before Miller was to leave | Pletely upset by the mysterious doings | size, shape and hue, impaled 3 cury, was at one time a rveporter in this | di ning cattle. Soon there a that her father had carried out his threat. | might usk why the body had not been ome ono n intended t toothpic i e der | city. He was the most argumentati ! and at the that eve salt could be obtamed the car could be | for the far west, and as they were about | round us. On “two occasions b 2 0 | kept cold enough inside to freeze s ready to go to bed, he took out and [H'UWlmg around at night was fi ame time the ealmest, man | thing placed in it. A fow days It counted his money. e had $290.50, and, | but he ot safely away. In spite of all | are for struck the town. Ho'would | Jargir ‘party of packers inspected the | knowing that his companion had but 4 | We could say, the suspicion kept growing | basket after the run- | of his rifle? The prosecut ter she heard | charge Throop with hiding it. shot, and was alarmed for fear | fense liad no theory about it, though they whear among the tree 1y ver dead. Now rives. You open it, cute Tn aboit half: an’ hiour: ‘Throop! camo HidHan e A wallIR AT theory of suicide | T{"K I\vux-k‘nyu llngu to :)\rguu. .1\!"' Me- cars, and the idea of summer packing | dollar or two, he handed him a $10 bill, that our Joe was the gulty party We | bottom, lying upon a bed of cool, home, pale and agitated, put up his gun, | was out of the question in the face of ¢ IDDOLEN WS OIL DIA WY, ""“"‘“(fii',' 'K ?.“l\‘ was born. Before that time all packing ke it from you except as let men into the cabin to seo t he did | leaves, a mass of long-stemmed vitizen sud- and sat_down to his dinner without a | cumstances. 2 3 word. The girl was crying, but he didn’t The case was called with a strong prej- seem to notice it. After the meal was | udice aga ! « ) eaten he hitched up a horse to the buggy | tion put in all its evidence, circumst morning, when an Anicri denly poped up with a pistol, leveled at his liead, and said: Throw up yer hands!” “Why?'" asked Mr, McRoberts, undis- avison not leave his bed, but it so happened that | or lilies of the valley or rare winter months, to the necessary incon- al.right,” veplied Miller. I | on those particular nights no deviltry | not that cver so ~ much sweeter venience and cost of all concerncd. Now | shall write you, ahd whenever you can committed. 1t was suggostod that | simple millions of hogs are packed during the | spare it you'may send it along. driven out of the camp, and when | conser warm months of each year, in Ch operations had been orowded into a few vinst the prisoner. The proseci- s 1 flowe ed to countenance any such step | sively delicious and so delicious], , and it scemedd to ever, . wlich _vour men friends red on, | used to send you? Those monstrositios little nd in the dark 0508 orchids, Ts and ¢ Aund have you heard about the which are so expen- and drove away, saying that he might | tial and otherw! Rurhod 20 “But you don’t know me; wo have boen | Wo re 0 y y ex- not be back before sundown. He vre- [ one a clear case. Before the defence “Throw thet 1) alone, and thousands of tons of fresh | together only a few days.” two thirds of the camp held ‘aloof from | pensive? Y«gu can now buy at a swell turned at 7 o'clock, and the daughter no- [ opened an event occurred which had a aem 4p: beef, mutton and pork are sent from the | 1 can tell s squarc man on sight. Put | us, and reports were circulated to our | confectioner’s a pound of conserved rose ticed that he was in much N tle, and the evening passed off ple Two days later, Throop meanwhile pur- [ McWilliams' name eng suing his labors around home, the sher appeared and ar “But what for?” “Put up your hands,” insisted the foot- pad, shaking his pistol. “Will you do vhat I tell you?” That depends,” said Mr. MeRoberts, “If you can show me any on why I in your wallet.” detriment. leaves at § was rolling up his money | One morning a miner, who was sup- | violets _!urT They look and tuste s [ Davison got up and passed behind him. | posed to be the richest man in the camp, | something heay iousness. | was found weltering in his blood. He had | be sent you be sure or humor. | most important bearing. A stranger was d to the affair of the cat- sted in a town twenty miles awa santly. | while trying to dispose ot a rifle with d on asilver brought to once, and when the stock centers to every 1mkmr— ant town in the states east of the Mis- sissippi and to Europe. '['wenty y ago only three rairoads connected Chi- | All of a sudden Miller lost con. 120 and New York. Now each of eight In the summer of 1369 the writer was | di lines offer incomparably better | one of the inhabitants of a mining camp | before, and had boldly elutched him. “In either referr wnd don’t say n the stock. He ¥ | plate armer | the c unty seat ested him. The or a pound of conserved like y, and if a box should any- overed & man in his tent the night | thing about fools aud their money. I melancholy experienca with these wuaat supper when the oficer entered, | right pressure was brought to bear on ;",‘L'l‘,"[“l‘ pit up ma hands, Tl no say but | §,cjlities than thoso three then had for | on the Purgatory river in southern Colo- | the striggle he had been stabbed in throe conserves before I know what they and it was afterward put in evidence | him he made a confession. He was l‘»‘l L weell; but yer mere requaist w:\_d transporting freight swifty, cheaply and | rado. One a tenderfoot reached our | | and was severely thongh not mor- 1 reccived a box of confectionery, that Throop turned deadly pale before | a traveling eclock —tinker. ~He had | be no Justification fur mcitodoswe absurh | ypinjured. “During th r ended with | camp. Ho v wble searecrow in | tally wounded. The sirgeon was called | and on top wus o layor of pink the errand of the ofticer wasmado known. | been —drunk —two —or three days | Wthing, Noo, why should yoo,u complete | Docember last nearly 86,000,000 pounds | gencral appe: He hadn’t a shilling | to arcss his hurts, s \ his presenco | rose leaves, made, as 1 imagined in m When told to consider himself a prisoner | before the shooting, and his outfit | Stranger, ask me at this, ‘oor 'o the | of huter went from Chicago to the | i money nor an ounce of outfit, and | and that of a dozen others the wounded | gross ignorance, of glazed papor ked w was the charge, and the | had been lost or stolen, Early on the | fiornin’ ona public street, tab putupmy | iy yvefrigerator cars. Much of this | when we came to question him it was | man deelared that he had gnized his | thought they made " very ity top ¥ replied: morning of the shooting he stole a couple | BRIGSY "\ 00 AL quantity went to butter the bread of Eu- | discovered that he was only “half baked.” | would-be assassin as our Joe. ~All of us | dressing, as'it were, but 1™ swopt ~ them or the murder of Henry McWilliams, | of hens from Throop, wnd went into the |, ~Dash yout' eried the robbor, “if you | yopo, “An average of fully eighty He gave his name as Joe, but he had | had slept soundly that mght, and whilo | into the waste basket along with the His body was found in the woods this | woods and made a fire and roasted them | flonit it guyin' and obey orders, "Ull | Jouds of d beef for each working | nothing else to tell. When asked what | we believed i tnco, we could | string with which the box was tied. On afternoon.”’ He was asleep when | PloW the top of your head oft! ay of 1885 left Chicago and Hammond, | his other name was, where he eame from, | not be positive that he had not left the [ meeting my friend next day, 1 thanked Throop was terribly agitated, but he | McWilliams stumbled upon him. Evi =T suburb of Chicago, for the cast, All [ how he reached us, ete., he looked from | cabin. The miners knocked offt work and | him or the box, and he asked me how I protested his innocence, saying he had | dences were at hand that he was a thief, Keep Quiet! this was safely preserved by r - | face to face in a vacant way and shook | went growling around, and about 10 | liked the conserved rose e . A ter- not seen the man for a week. As he was | and the farmer ordered him to pick up | And take Chamberlain’s Colie, Cholery | tion, not only on the way to thie s . | his head. We were not the Kind of men to | o'clock in the forenoon & rush was made | rible suspicion crossed my mind, I taken away he whispered to his child, | and leave. McWilliams threatened him | and Diarrhwea Remedy. It cures pain in | but also much of it on the voys :ross | turn & chap like that loose to be scalped | for our eabin, They had determined to | struggled for f-possession and sad who was clinging to him with his gun and he closed in to wrest it | the stomach almost instantly. Get a 25 | the ocean as well. by the Indians or to perish of starvation. | hang Joe. The three of us got out our | they were beautiful, but [ hadn't yet A ¢ nothing of my chasing the cattle | aw In the struggle the weapon was | cent bottle, take nothing else. You will As illustrajing the growth of the | Wo made him wash up, }mLun the gar- | revolvers to defend him, and the angry | tasted them, I got away from him assoon discharged and th dressed beef traflic of Cl sontributed, and after he had | mob was held at bay on the slope for a | as L could, farmer was killed. | need nothing else to cure the worst c: 20, it may be [ ments w an home, and flew up stairs This was overheard by the sheriff, and | At the same instant another shot was | of Diarrhwa, Cholera Morbus or bowel | stated that m 1584 there were shinped | @ot a square meal he looked and acted | few minutes. We had placed Joe inside, | to the waste buskot. I found two tiny at the proper time was used, to the pri- | fired, but the tinker did not see Throop. | complaint. 'This medicine is made for | from Chicago and from Hammond & | ko b dihprent man. and had noticed that he did not seem a | petals—the housemaid had thrown the soner’s confusion. The daughter was | Heat first threw down the gun and ran | bowel complaint only and has been in | total of 498,000,000 pounds; in 18385 Chi One of my two tent mates was an old | bit alarmed. While we were holding the: | rest into the ash-heap. 1T fished out these convinced of ilt fr first. ‘The blundering sheriff did not | guu take away the rifle, and he had nosooner | other outht. bound departed” than the girl inspected it, to There could be no doubt of the truth ! hold word in thousands of hom her father’s guilt from the | away. but afterward thinking to sell it and progure an- | teen Pn-,:nrs. Its success has been un- | H od and its name become a house- sturned for the | constant use in the west for nearly fif- | cago shipped 405,500,000 pounds and | surgeon from Obio, and, as we had | mob and parleying, Joe climbed outof a | two and ato th mmond 110,500,000 pounds, making an | roomy quarters, he suggested that | window on the other side and was xun- | I have not had any conse aggregate of 576,000,000 pounds of beef, | we ‘take Jos in. The suggestion | ning away when they caught sight of | sent me sing Trvit. ' or 28,280 car-loads of tentons each. That | was adopted, and he was installed | him. Such action seemed conclusive of ! but one rebufy WA A S I I — e 14 55 1 55 W : B FOR SALE. N §3,000. Lot on Dodg), B0-feet froat, corner, $3,000, 48 fect on 26th street, near Dodge, Y A% 5 ,: “ = j : 186 feet on 24th st., corner Douglas, ¥ H & > “ 8 h e $25,250. gEsid N e = I~ . ] H e % ° 44 feet on 24(h, near Farnam, $5,500, 3 3 3 by 5 . i e | Lot on Dodgs, corner 96th, 60148, i A = [ g B lasrd 133t i i § dA24d SHID J00J-FT PuD 322.38 op1n NNV YN ‘ORI ZOE ‘Abam) 2ap uwOINPPD S1Y) W2 $10) AL PPV IJunvaq SWLL s 7Y} 10 $70) oxay) Ind Jwer) jaoys v 20) pm s *sanby mo] 3V 307 PoO. B §1,600. B ) < B-acre lots in Farcam Park, $120 : e] pa- A N per acre, Easy terms, e = » - Stock of clothing amd furnishing 8 A > N gcods in good locatiou for sale or ex- change for Omaha real estate, Schlesinger Bros. Real Estate Dealers, 1018 FARNAM ST. PSyeoo T 3SOsT STLL “spuswhivd fipyruows wy 22uD)Dq ‘Amop OCF 03 C&$---fisvy SWASL, "jesug wewiey g)g] ‘SYIIVIA ILVASI TVIY S0¥d GHONISHTHOS NOLLIAdY SHIAINISITHOS n with profound rehsh, ) ved flowers Fortune seldom tukes