Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 23, 1886, Page 5

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L U R o s 8 R RATR G A NOTARY PUBLICS POWER. Mrs. Dr. Dogge Oomm fusing to Make Depositions. WORKING TO SECURE RELEASE Articles of Incorporation Filed —A Habeas Corpns Case Granted Which Dia Not Release the Priconer—Lincoln News. FROM THE BEE'S LINCOLE BURBAT.] re the rele wife of and mitted there the day before to testify or give in her deposition befor a notary. It will remembered that after fhe trial and conviction of Herold on the charge of def g his creditors, and the trial and 48 an accessory in the ereditors, Hart Bros<. and others, thre their attorney, commenced a civil ainst the Dogges, Mrs. Bertha Dogg at about that time purchased a L va commodious property on the corner of P and Sixteenth streets. eivil suit was brought by the above men- creditors against Mrs. By Dogge, Otto H, Dogge and Christ Herold to proper by Mrs gge in r name to the rment of the Herola debts. Notice was served on the Dogg to appear before W. J. Houston, a not public of this eity, so that their deposi tions in the could be taken The Dogges acting, it is stated, under instrue- tions from their sattorney, refused and failed to appear, whereupon the not issued an sttachment for Mrs. Dogge, and wh en she was brought to the notary's office she refused to testify and w: the notary committed to jail for c for refusing { At case case tempt. Immediate steps were then taken, | as before narrated, for the relesse of the prisoner thrcugh a writ of The point at issue in the case. the legal question, seems to be as to whether the efendants can be compelled 1o testify in a court of deposition, they b dents at the place where the suit is insti- tuted and where it will be heard. It does not appear that the question as to whether the notary exceeded h in committing the wom one of prominence, t tion p for settleme tions can be taken in the locality where all parties reside prior to court times That such depositions may be required is often met with the argument that life is uncertan, that location is uncertain, and that sudden callings away are often improvised by those who do not wish to testify, and on these grounds the right to dernand depositions in important case Béeit 10Tbalonen conobdad., Tha que: tion in this case of extra judicial powers being conferred on a notary public, i the way of commitments, is one of ine est, and the Ber will furnish the decision lllm( the case will bring in a future arti cle. ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION of the Union Hydraulic Drain Tile com- pany of Omaha have been tiled with the secretary of state. The article general nature of the busin transacted as the manufactur of hydraulic drain tile and sewer pipe machines and tiling and sewer pipe. The smount of capital stock is fixed at $60,000 and may be increased to as much as $200,000 by 1 two-thirds’ vote of the stoc holders. "The corporation commen business with the tiling of the payp and has as the day fixed for its termin: tion the 9th day of July, 1985. The artic] was signed by the following incorpora- tors: Robert J. Carson, Jefl W. Bedford, Abraham R. Sauer, Mrs. Laura Martino- vich und Willis D. Sherman. Articles of incorporation of the Chad- ron Waterworks company have been filed with the secretary, the articles setting forth the object of the company to mamtain, build and operate a system of waterworks for the city of Chadron, in- cluding the laying of mains, hydrants, ote., nnd the purchase of real estate upon which to build the works. The capital stock of the company is fixed at §50,000, divided into shares of $25 each, the cor- poration to commence business July 16 and to continue for ninety-tive years The signatures to the artieles comprise the names of thirty-two citizens'of Chad- rou, the names themselves peing indica tive of the push that the corporation will ive to their work. It the works ure put uto operation at once Nebraska ean boast a two-year old town supplied with Waterworks, IN COUNTY COURT. The case of Frank Skinner, bound over by the police judge on a charge of rap ‘was up before Judge Parker on a plea of habeas corpus, which the judge sustained, holding that the police judge had no j risdiction as examining magistrate in criminal matiers arising outside the cor- porate limits of the city. There are a number of lawyers who have expressed a decidedly opposite opinion to the judge's r)uhng» n this waib;x ’il 5;“‘ u.; one of those points in which judges disagree. Young Skinner was not allowed his lib- erty. ver, the judge remanding him back tothe custody of the sheriff, to be held until a new com t could be Jodged inst him. The complaint was duly fo and Skinner can now have trial before the county judge, while all the little nasty detalls will re-an- nounced to court bangers-on, who in such matters become 5o interested. Dana Hyde, one of the parties arrestea by the law and order workmen, was up ir county court, waived examination and was bound over to answer to the charge at the next term of the district court, The attorney of the Law and Order league is asking a speedy disposition of the case in which James and his partner APPEAT 88 prosecuting witnesses on the grounds that these two witnesses are anxious to be released from these dutie: The county judge seems to be of the opinion that the witnessos, James and hitcomb, cannot be bound over to the distriet court as witnesses in all these casos ou the grounds that the charges are all misdemesnors instesd of felonies. Whether, therefore, these two partios are on hand st district court time is a ques- tion known only to themseloes. LITTLE THINGS. In police court this morni of the usual order were s rs eight cases idly dis) ught ho robbed a drunken man of §20, but u.m intoxicated hias sobered up and left town the testimany wil be: lacking aad treated as X itted to Jail For Re- | | HE | him even greate | to do with it S T P o o R S A T AP O W R 0 2 THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: FRIDAY over the acenes of former achievements in the forum porter Nyron E. Wheeler, of | st'e district ty nds and seeing <de nere rning knights from nto gathering of Knigh the most magnifice »n record during their vis 0 ¢y speak of themselves ue winners with becoming modesty econd of the series of Liv Leavenworth base ball games occu he purk to-day, and the signs are prov be u great game. Two his Grand 1s J. B. Long Alma; Wm. ( r son, Nebraska City ton: W.J. Agnew, Alex land; Geo. L. Bean, Oms 1 BURIED TONS OF COIN. Squire White's Rich Deposit Mouey 1 His Hot-House and Garret. Squire Aaron White, the most ecoen tric man in eastern Connecticut, died a few days ago st Thompson, aged 89 vears, says the New York Sun. He was a awyer, aud everybody in his neighbor hood knew him, because le had a His many eccentr; gained fame He was born in Roode Island. When Governor Dorr wias the executive head of the state Aaron was the attorney general. He was a man after that queer politician's own he: and he took part in the great Dorr re lion. Squire White had to flce insurrection had been sup; me into Connecticut and pompson, in the litte villag of level heaa os depot on the Norwich & Wor road At last and then, although his mind was cl and 8 lawyer and several ne asked him sbout his cstate, he kep about the hot-house. He ‘‘didn’t ca alk v," he said, “‘but he y made ou ! awer, that would expl died pencefully, and n : his burial his executors and other per- sons gathered at his farm-house to how much money he had left, and wh BY the terms of the will 1 d b left to _a brother Hackensuck, N. J., and has a tusiness in New York but the document said nothing about the c Servatory or any other property ex the dwelling and the land. The nzzled hey felt sure that | is deepiy HE TOUCHED TOBY'S TOPENOT As Obio Oonvict Takes in a Trasting Parson | and Escapes The Story of Charley Clark's E<cape from a Penitentinry—Person- ating & Preacher to Perfection. Tor obvious reasons the keepers of jnil ke it a point to ¢ of escane so and as esc of their igrnorance of muck ting regarding convicts ard them, Clark Red Cha de hint inte and thuse employed to The of Cha Cha etson. aline s several other titles, from the € Prison some yeurs ago, wa le of the genius and desper ional crook who had been tled" for seven or eight yeurs for bery escape 1as nd Ohio a fair ion of *set rob- | the prison he began making mental notes | for future | sixty hours af prison he | bring in from the shop, | the cement fi he lay down to die of old age, | | and he wasn't right execu- | pu t Squire White must have had a deposit of | coin somewhere, because he had been col- lecting it for many years, but there was nothing to indicate that it was in a bank, and visits to banks in eastern Connecti- | cut helped them not at all. Where was it, then® they asked themselves. At last 1 bright 1dea popped into the brain of one “Perhups it is buried in_the hothouse | sted under the floor in the garret id was acted on at once. The men began to dig. They dug down into the earth for several feet in the conserva- tory, and the spade struck something solid. They unearthed it. It was a moldy and rotting cigar box. The cover fell off, and it was found to be packed solid full of pennies of all datesin the last thirty or forty years. n they dug, and everywhere in the hothouse, at th of about two feet, they upturned ar box vacked either with penmes or nickels or silver or gold pieces. Over the whole ground they went with their svades, sometimes turning up gold and sometimes silver pieces or pennies. The search was continued for several days, and, after all the ground had been dug up and the cigar boxes stacked, it was found that over four tons of coin had been taken out of the earth in the hot- house. N and under the floor was found many hundred dollars of gold und silver. All the n, about §6,000 or §7,000, was at onee shipped in bags on freight carsto Squire Aaron White's brother in Hack- ensack. Many of the cigar boxes in the rarret had been badly gnawed by out the rats got away with of the wealth. Mr. White's plan during the latter part of his life was to buy peunies directly from the govern- ment; by the government system of ex- change he could get $1.20 in pennies for §1in puper. He was especially fond of pennies, and there were so many of them thatin shipping them to the heir his | executors nsed big grain shovels with beveled eages to shovel them into the rse sacke in which they were for irded to New Jersey s St, Jacobs Oil will e of neuralgia in a n know this. e THE FAITH-HEALERS, worst cuse Thousands Prayed for Knitting Machines and Got Sewing Machines instead. Chieago Tribune: Thefaith-healers met yesterday at No. 16 Washington street. Brother Somerville made his tirst nwu-l.r» ance st the meeting and delivered the opening address. fle related some of his experiences. There was 8 woman in this city who had become separated from her busband and was Jeading & wayward ca- reer. Her husbana m spent all his money looking for her ana st last Jocated her here, but he was in Minneapohs at the time and had no money to puy her fare. Mr. Somerville heard of this pre- dicament snd prlgad for a pass ‘hen he made a tour of the ticket offices. At one place they told him the fare was only §. Mr. 'St. John, of the Rock Island Road, without & question guve him a dead-head ticker. zzun. he prayed for €, when his own family were beg- ging for bread, and the Lord xmwedmwry answered mim. The speaker was an out- and-out infide! for sixteen years. His wife prayed for him continually for twelve years, but seemingly without ef- fect. One day, while crossing the prairie toward Humboldt park, he saw & tent in the distance, and under the impression that he was going to s circus he went to the camp-meeting and took the imitial step toward his conversion. rother Webb once asked s friend if she didn't think the Lord knew every one who had ap ailment by name. She re- plied she did. He asl another person and he replied: “Well, He might know my christian name, but I don't think He knows my surname.’’ Brother Webb as- sured lum the Lord knew it and could spell it backwards. A letter was received from Michigan in 'mc:-d fln;u:riw -.t:dh .xg Lh; mfl ever cured epilepsy, as a daugh- ter suffering from that ailment. A four- child was reported healed b, r Ellis that lust wee! ed for some kmitting rua- ol must have been some it tle misunderstanding, becanse in answer he mivm some sewing 1oacl . He expects others next week. Prayers were offered for a boy present afflicted 'I‘H.h mmqm, and & letter was roB;: rom California requesting prayers. - made for 8 gt of & Feurs, who is partially oiaiferd Somoe—iaraluabie Tavaluable to all good xt they went to the gurret, | use. The number of doors, the location of guards, the defences of various windows, the Iay of the sewers the thickness of the walls—every point | noted and stored up in his memorsy He was assigned 10 a cell on the ground tier. In three duys he had the distance to the outside wali to a fra tion of an finch. His idea was to move one of the flagstones from the floo of this cell and tunnel out, r being received in at work. With an chisel wiich he managed to secr te and scraped om around the s of the corridor sentinels lm«od s half hour, during the ni d it wo weeks before Clark i the stone ready to lift out. He found a foot of der the stone, and be t and hid the dirt in his tnat the sewer for that wing ran within fourteen feet of his cell He wanted to make the old One door sure of it simply to cs his tunnel. Fo night unsuspe b as he had to outin his it made slow rks fore which ot brick opening quantities ae to Indeed, it poured d filled the corri s were gus poured out in_such almost saffocate him. through the tunnel dor until the ls be to search for the 'k had to go down and nd he was made 1l for a nd of that time’he tried it Wiks WO! and he found himsell oblige the undertaking He could have n the tunnel, but there was ay to dispose of the dirt. He rej the flugstone, cemented it with dowgh and his efforts were unsuspected Clark had been in prison sbout five months when he concocted another plan From some loecal convict Zot the give up eas name of a minister of the gospel in the | county who somewhat resembled hiw in general appearunce. He also ascertained that the man was very timid snd kind Pretty goon Clark was seized | an “indisposition,”” and while not nough to be sent to the h(h{ni(:\l, he excused from work in the shop and permitted to remain in his cell. The prison chaplain found him an eager list- ener to his exbortations and muatters were soon 8o shaped that he was led to believe that Clark had something on his mind. When pressed to admit that such was the case, the prisoner hesitated just long enough %o put the chaplain’s curios- ity on edge. Yes, he had something on his mind. It was something the itev.To- bias Green ouzht to know. If he would call st the prison some day he should hear a confession which would clear up a great mystery and set certain things night For three or four days Clark beat | about the bush, playing the ch: all he was worth, and the result w the Rey. Tobias Green visited the p with his mind made up to listen to some staange [ and wonderful confession. 1t was not Clark's day for confessing. He realized that be was a bad—b-a-d man, and was quite willing to talk about his soul and his future, but he would teli his story some other day—the day after to- morrow. An appointment was made for that day with the Rev. Tobias Green, and 1 feeling that he had greatly eart of & desperate m “indisposition” increased some- | what, just enough to keep him in his cell 1d to prevent Lim from being too closely watched. The chaplain came in and prayed with him, the doctor sent him a | ¥ few doses of quinine and whenever any | one looked into his cell the man was lying on his bed At4 o'clock on the day designated the Rev. Tobins Green put in an appearance. It was midwinter and the day was so cold thut the preacher was well bundiedup, having on a beavy overcoat and » fur cap and muffler. The day was so dark that some of the halls were lighted. One of the hall masters conducted the preacher to Clark's cell and Jeft hun, and the good man took the convict by the hand and anxiously in- quired after the state of bis health.” Not more than two minutes had elapsed be- fore the preacher was Iying on his back on the bed, with a in lus mouth and his thoughts terribly mixed up from a rap on the head. When ne had got mat- ters steaightened out he was lt.rxpged 0 his shirt and drawers, and his hands and feet wore securely tied. Ciark had pre- pared himself for the job, and it was done in a prompt and thorough manner. In side of ten minutes he was dressed in the preacher’s clothing, while the latter wus covered up with the blankets. Then the conviet sat down with s back to the door and kept wp & mumbling conversa tion for half an hour. During this time, as he himself related, he poured into the rrru-her'b eur all the stories he had ever heard to the detriment of the “‘eloth.” He finally ended by singing s bymn, and when he passed outside the cell door he turned and said, in a voioe meant to be heard by the nall watchman: “G night, my son. 1 truly hope that this visit hus been the means of dl.»- ing you gocd. I will come aguin to- morrow, if possible.” With that be started for the hall, and the watchman passed him to the wicket. This was unlocked without question, as aiso were all other obstructions to liberty, and he reached the street with- out the slightest hindrance. He had relatives in the suburbs of the city, slthough the fact was not known to the prison officials. and he walked straignt to the house and was taken in. The Rev. Tobias Green remained passive until the hour came for the men to be locked up, when he was discoverod. al was at once sent out, but Clark was safe. He re secreted in the honse for about a month, and was then shlprmd AWay, and his capture was never Ivn relating his story be said that the five or six minutes necessary for him to r out “'MJ’"'“"- aged lum more than two years of his life, afternoon of the ——— They Staked the Preacher. News: A hots us how the. i the first in B From the moment Clark entercd | and within | out | went | crowded for Christ g worth two ¢ k off his hat sy cush it ¢ Buck it | thate® “Why, play it in, yon k bet it on ne of the games Mr. Bull preferred to he went to the proy 3t §47 for the chiy he tund w n which a fiour ps said t ‘what 15 the chips churen SOCIELY NOW Wors! — e A BEGGAR'S ROMANCE. estimated | - Once the Belle of Salt Lake and Now | Compelled to Grind a Hand-Organ. woman hand-or | ducts® gan on oue of the Ct day after day r n of shine 1there on a out the sume or cold, she faded gown shawl is al y across her shoul t sk t | with age, is pulled well down over b | forehend so 1 4 | eare-worn f he | he sewer | | fashion, | she was. She is t | John Brigham Y¢ |iest men in favorit niece of the on Morm prophet. 2 ury rse than before | pledged elder Who n o rmon church but without hort timo | the wedding she w | n youny newspaper man. He gentile. When her father got wind of the marriage be repounced his daughter cast her out of his ho . She fled her husband to New York, where ined employment as a reporter on i newspaper. Shortly after, zhit beeame affected and he wad 10 retain his position, Then came the struggle for an existen heir littl savings were soon exhausted in trying to restore the husband’s eyesight, and after three years’ tres he became totally blind. Though disinherited and reduced to poverty, the devoted wife remained true to h arriage vows. She wrote to | her begging him to aid ner, but receiving o Teply sought for employ ment. Every one turned a deaf ear to her appeals for work, and as a last resort | she accepted an engagement in a concert saloon. There her splendid voice at- tracted attention, and she was able to eurn enough to give her blind husband a comfortavle home. Their prosperity, however, was short-lived, for not long after she was prostracted by sickness and the fever robbed her of her Yoice and left her but a wreck of her former self. Dis- bheartened in_spirit and feeble 1 health she began the lite of a street beggur, wandering from place to place, and finally locating in Chieago, the Mecea for poverty-stricken Bohemians. Al though dragged down to the very depths E and degradation, she y clung who unwittingly 3 11, cently 2 woman who knew the beggar v ) saw and recognized her, and by close guestioning elicited the sad v of her unfortunate career. — Halford Sauce is cat dyspeptics. s ke Well Hitched. Detroit Free Press: One of the waite st the hotel in Grenada, Miss., told us that a colored wedding was coming oft that evening, and several white people went over to the house designated to wit ness the affair. The happy couple finally stood up before the minister, who smd Samuel, you an' Lucinds am shortly to be jined together. Does you desire to back out?" “No, sah." “How am it wid yon, Lucindat Does you want to flunk afore aese yere white folks*"’ *No, suh." “Den you two hitch hands.” They hitehed. “Samuel, does you take her fur better or wuss* Am you gwine to do de fa'r thing by dis yere gurl, whos’ fadder was killed on the railroad up nigh Jackson® “Yes, sah." “Lucinda, does you realize de serions- ness of dis opportunity® Am you gwine to stick to Samuel rlean frew to de judg- | ment day, or ‘am you gwine to trifle around arter odder men®’ ze gwine 16 stick.” “Den, chill'n, in de presence of dese yere white men_from the norf, one of whom subscribed two bits yesterday to help build up de meetin’ house dat was | blowed down by, the sigheione, I d nounce you a8 hitghed, jined a cordin’ 1o the law an' gospel. o 'long an’ behuve yerselves!, - pf. M. D., 78 Cumber- land Street, Br 3 writes June 9, 1883: *1 take ploasure in recommend- mg Allcock's Porous Plasters in all cases of general Debility, especially where the pains are severe over the regions of the Kidneys, Liver and Chest; marked im- provement occurs soon as rvelief from suffering is obtained. For Lumbago these Plasters surpass liniments, &c -~ J.F Riley, of Riley & Bro, a waell known Chicago plumbing firm, is 1n the city for a few duys BRI 100 Doses One Dollar. Is inseparably connected with Hood Sarsaparilia, and is true of no other medicine. It is an unsnswerable srgu- ment as to strength and economy, while thousands lestify to ité superior blood- w‘lm““w qualities. A od's Sursy, s contains 100 doses and will last o mogpth, while c not over & week. ©co nomy, Wse ouly Hood's ward Now you bonnet, rusty | i | The only ¥ JULY 23, 1856, Cries of the Cattle Ba Western Nebraska, Detailed Report of the Rainfall in Keith and Adjoining Counties ~Crop Prospects Un- excelled, Brs snd 1 . contented set selves d desert tw e thousands of d the geners ded from Ohio to decry Keith oo the mflux of sett n elsewhere, and | most ment section occupied To test the truth of these reports 1 vis ited Keith county, and drove 140 miles in erent directions, and can present th report: Abundant snow fell March, and also in April pring rains were frequent June 21t a very heavy the water has stood in depressione ) to the pre 98th & light rain extended the country; July 10th a heavy rain n southeastern e inches, und permiting bry July 17th a light n and in southeastern avy rain; July 19th a six nuous gentle mome | 1zzling, with rain t | sky being wholly over On my trip 1 entered | Dexter, drove to Ogs w t ter th t every gover: wing ndant 50 that | andab rain fell holl t time; Ju over we and | ing tc T fell everyw Keith a very 1ning by sligh fourieen miles to O Keith srywhere hwest and did not where rain was there was an espec id from forty to on old ground Even on this spring's fieclds of oats which ¥ to thirty bushels | has not hurt small grain at On oid ground the stand of corn better than anywhere t1 SOU alla. 1 as far west ns n lme of B. & M on 3 the Platte vyalley ¥ tenm from Central City to Ogalalla Nowhere in Keith w rorn not as good as last stand is very thin, owing rgely 1o the depredations of gophers, hich skillfully follow the line made by the plan take every kern Sod d by band makes r showing and in some lo . promises from ten to twenty-tive bushels low corn 1 saw was some sod corn planted in a sand draw. Veg- etables are scarcely as good as last year, not being so large, although a crop, but everywhere the sod gardens are yielding good measures of s and beans. From Ogalalla south for twenty miles on one side of the road or the other there is an almost contin- wous strip of dark green corn, and no- where did ] find a single settier disconr- aged or unxious to sell out. On the con- , our heaviest farmers are breaking all they can, and many settlers have from 160 tc ) acres under cultivaiion, s everyone summer, quent and in larger quautities, has fallen in eastern Nebraska ihan anywhere east of the 101st meridian The B. & through southern Kei means business. The guesti is proving much less troubles expected. They are found in pl depth of afew feet only, while wuter i3 sure th divide 130 feet on the south line. ours traly, A. Ex — How a Married Wom. Cincinuati Epquirer: There is an arti- cle going the rounds entitled, “How the Girls Go to Slecp.” The mauner in which they go to sleep, according to the article, can’t hold a candle to the way a married worman goes to sleep. Insteaa of thinking what she should have at tended to before going to bed, she thinks of 1t afterward. ‘hile she is revolving these mutte in her mind, snd while snugly tucked -up in bed, the old man is scratehing his legs in front of the fire and wondering how he will pay the next month’s rent. Saddenly she exclaims “James, did you lock the door Which door?'’ says James The cellar door,” says she. Goes to Slecp. James. bad better go down and iock it, for 1 heard some one in the back yard last night Accordingly James paddies down the stairs and locks the door. About the time Jumes returns and is going to bed sbe remarks: “Did you shut the stair door* No,” says James Well, if it is not shut the cat will get up nto the chamber,’” “‘Let her come up, then,” ill-naturedly. ‘My goodness, no!” returns his wite; “she'd suck the baby's bresth." Then James paddies down stairs again and steps on u tack, and closes the stair door and curses the cat, and returns to the bodroom. Justas he begins to climb into his conch his wife observes: ‘I for- got Lo bring up some water; suppose you bring up some in the big tin.”’ And so Jumes, with s muttered curse, goes down into the dark Kitchen and falls over a chair, and rasps all the tinware off the wull in _sesrch of the “'big” tin. and then jerks the stair door open and howls ““Where the dence are the matches: She gives him & minute direction where to find the matches, and adds that she would rather go and get the water herself than have the whole neighborhood raised about it. After which James finds the matches, procures the water and comes up-stairs and plunges into bed FPresently his wife says: ‘“‘James, let's have an understanding about money mat- ters. Now, next week I've got to pay—" “f don't know what you've got 1o pay, and don't care,” shouts Jumes, us he lurcnes around and jums his face against wall; “ail I wani is sleep That's all very well for youn,” snans his wife, s she pulls the covers viciously “you mever think of the worry and trouble that I heve. And there 'is Ar- minta, who, I believe, is taking the says James, Lt her take ‘em,” says James Herevpon she begines 1o ery softly sbont the tune James is falling into but en- tle doze she punches him in the ribs 5;1!. her elbow and says: “Did you hear that scandal about Mrs. Jones!” “Where!" su, “Why, Mrs “Where?' ' inquir “I d eaid his wife, “you are etting wore stupid every day You Jones that lives u1 No. 21v W ell. day before yesterday Susan Smith told Mrs. Thomnson that Sam Barker had siud that Mrs. Jones hnd — is Keith, making sod | else in the | ad visited and this included | the corn shriveled | knows, this has been a par- | but_the rainfall | i show that rain, more fre- | xy: at 200 feet on the top of the | nd at him, wrape o them, and lave awake until 2a, m g how badly used | she e And ¢ way the mariied Imm-mg-m. - American Carpet Manufacture. b Carpet Trade Recent 1itorinl force have g and time magnitude which it renre power ¥ wo_fir n the Uhnite evoted mainly nd mes cut The average n powerJoom is thirty and the possible annusl country in extra-supers yards por sunum 1 But ooms mre not r and due allowance be The growth of the brussels is interestir ). In 1586 brussels ¢ were being woven Philadelphia by hand. Away back about that ime also, the Auburn, (N. Y.) state | prison, under Mr | out body brussels, and the old factory s E'S. Higgins bough the first to muake br ufactu sm was perfected, is famil- | rand need not be rehearsed. Since | the war the great companies at Hartfotd | Lowell, and Clinton have assumed huge proportions, and turn out each year a magnificant product 1n brassels other concerns are growing up to them In the decade past, Philadelphia has loomed, and contains to-day a large proportion of the | brussels machinery ofihe country. There are in the United States, in position, or out 10 be placed. 1,197 brussels looms The number in each state_is as follows Peunsylvania, 485; New York, 106 Con nectient, 108; Massachusetts, 403, New | Jersex. 10. The average yicld of a brus. sels loom is fifty yards per day, and al el in the country,ru time, would yield 17, r, Sundays and holidays ing stouts and five me goods at §1 per yard, the value of s product would be setts, § vield ¢ r yurds per diem Id of the entir 000 made justry ssels @ since | try-brussels concern S is that of Alex Smith & Sons Co., at Yonkers, N. Y. They | have looms on tapestries, and can | turn out probably four hundred avd fifty five thousand yards per month, worth in tenwire quality at the lust list, $351,620. Tapestry looms stand around among the several states ms follows: Pennsyl i (Philadelphia) New York, 89%; | Massachusetts, 186; New Jersey, 87 1,510. The total value of th product of the county varies Were the 1,510 looms all running on (which they are far from doing, many be ing on velvese only), the 1y mverage would foot up 22 ards, worth, at | 60 ecnts per yard, §13 00, Power-loow tapestry brussels were first made in America by E. S, Higgins & Co., | on the Bigelow loom, and at this writing the prejudice 1 favor of Englsih goods as disappeared, American tapesiries excelfed by none in intrinsic value Concerning tapestry-veivets it ie diffi- cult to estimate. Any modern tapestry loom can be adjusted for veivets, and it is difficult to learn how mnny are to-day | weaving velvet carpets. A tapestry loom will run out fitty yards of velvet per day, and the possible yield of the country can be gotten ut by multiplying all the tapes- try lcoms in position by the product of | one. Velvets were pobular from England forty to fifty years ago and even earlier. Succeeded for a time by Wiitons, tney have again tully asserted themselves and become a standard fubric | e in the Uni ar PILES! PILES! PILES A sure cure for Blind, Bleeding, Itchin and Ulcernted Piles has been discovered by Dr. Williams, (an Indian remady), called Dr Williams' Indian Pile Ointment.’ A singie | box hins cured the worst chronic cases ot 2 or | 80 years standing. No one need suffer five | minutes after applying this wonderful sooth | ing medicive. * Lotions and_instruments do | wore_harm than good. Willisns' Indian Pile Olntment absorbs the tumors, allays the | intense itching, (particularly st night after | getting warm in bed), acts as a poultice, gives | instant relief, and is prepared only for Piles, | #teling of privase paris. aud for nothing else. | SKIN DISEASES CURED. | Dr. Frazier's Magic Ointment oures a6 by | macic, Pinples, Black Heads or Grubs, Blotches and Eruptions on the face, leaving the skin clear and beautiful. Also enres Itoh, fbeum, Sore Nipples, Sore Lips, and | Oid Obstinate Ulners. & | , Sold by druggists, or mailed on recaipt of } d by Kubn & Co., and Schroeter & | At whelesale by C. F. Goodman. A Congress of Nations. A Buffalo -car recently carried a | motley freight. A Chinnmun with a | lsundry :, 4 negro with o white- an with a basket of n Italian with a bag of pea nuts, an lIrishman, a Germsn, anda uime American dude made up quite a Congress of Nations.” ——— When Faby was sick, we gave her Casteria, ‘When she was & Child, she cried for Castoria, Whes sbie bocame Miss, she clung to Castoria, Whan slie bad Children, sbe gave thew Castoria, e Will Loose His Foot. A carpenter naumed Johnson fell from a scaflold on Thirteenth street yesterday, and sustained a compound, cominuted und complicated fraclure of his right ankle, which will make amputation of the limb necessary, Drs. Gulbraith, Hofl- man and Lucke will perform the opera- tion to- Ko Ammonia. Li PRICE BAKING POVDER CO. Templeton & Whitney, HARD AND ;DFT ;;;; AND W000D, Rock springs, Ilinois, M and fowa Soft Coal. PR s Office —218 South Fifieenth st. Yards - Bightoenth nd luard sia. sourt | T ¥ n a few cellars in | Barber, was turning | and + Red Star Line Carrying the Releinm Rosal ar Muid, sniling every sa United States duy Antwerp & New York T0 THE RHINE, GERMARY, ITALY, HOL- LAKD AND FRANCE SPRING AND SUMMER RATES $100. Excursion 0 5 r Wright & Sons, 18, 8 Broadway, New York 1y Pundt nm ' eneral 1918 Farnnm st. ;. Prulsen & o, D 0. Freem Lrnam et M. A DISBROW &GO Wholesale Manufucturere and Doalors in Sash, Doors, Blinds, Mouldings. Hurd Wood Interior Pinih Manties, Counters, Pew Ends, Brackets. SCROLL WORK and TURNI Dealers in Buiiding Paper. Main Ofice and FPactory at Lyons, lowa, Office & Warerooms Cor. 42th & Izerd Sts. Pine 'HAMBURG - AMERICAN Compan: A DIRECT LINE FOR n New York Thuredays and Suturdays for M. moutt (LONDON),Clertioug, PAKLS nad HAM: « G Returning, the steame Wednesdays sengers 8t Southampt et onbin 83 Railrond tickets from 1 diff. London, or to any Epeinnd, FREE, Sten end for “Tourist 1 bt C. B. RICHARD & 00, . General Pusseny onts, € Broadway, New York; Washington aod im Suile Sts. Chicago. 1L LINGOLN BUSINESS DIRECTORY Recentls Built Newly Furnished The Tremont., J.C.¥F11 ERALD & SON. Proprietors, Cor. #th and P sts,, Lincoln, b, Retes K150 per duy. Street cars from house 10 any . J.HW.HAWKINS, Architect, .34 and 42, Richurds Block, Lincoln, vHtor on 11th straet pince in the South of from Europe only Office: . E roder o1 Droederof -~ AY CATTLE SoRT HORS CATTLE F. M WOODS, Live Stock Auctioneer Sules mude in all parts of the TS at falr Roow §, State Hiock, Lincoln, N oway und Short Horn bulls for sale B. H. GOULDING, Farm Loans and Insurance, Correspondence in regard 1o Jonne_solicited. Koom ¢, Richards Biook, Lincoln, Net . Public Sale, Denver, Col., June 101h, 1886, 40 bead of Show Short Horne. Batoe & Crulok s#hank, yonr-olds, weighing 1650: bulls and heife: ddress Field and Farm, for catal ues, Col. (.M. Branson, Lincoln, Ne Col Oode Auctioneer. GaL " When in Lincoln stop at National Hotel, And get 1 £0od dinner for Zic. J. A FEDAWAY Prop. ‘Union National Bank, OF OMAZIIA, 206 Hasonic BIk, K. W. Cor. Cap.Av. & 16th $100,000 500,000 Acoounts solicited. Interest prid on time de- posit-: collootions made in all parts of the west, Paid up Capital, - - Authorized Capital, - = | andhaving provided the larcest and best vaul in the city, we will roceive valuable articles on #tornge. Prompt attention will be given 10 all business entrusted 10 us. JNo. W, RODEFER, Cashier. W W. MARER e Telephine No. 8 P. BOYER & CO. Ilall'ssms:mlz Timelocks d Jai! Work, 020 Yarnam Street, Othaba. Neb. Railway Time Table (MAHA. The tollowing is the time of urrival and de- parture of trains by Central Standard Tin e at 0 Truing of the C., St P. rrive J4th und Webste ots: 1 N C. B &Q.and K.C, 5 J. & C. B._from the K &M depot all others from the Union Pucific depot. BHIDGE TRAINS Bridge trains will jenve U B 58— b 00840~ wve Transfer for Omaha at —4:42— 10351087 B0 T4 BT 15 p. m. CONNECTING LINES Arrival and Geparture of iraine from the Trunsfer Dapot st Council Blufls: DEPAKT. ARKIVE. CHICAGO, ROUK IRLAND & PACIFIC DY:ib A B0 1 CHICAGO, MILWAUKEE & $1 2. 9:15 4. M | 36407 M KANSAS QITY, AT JOE & COUNCIL BLUPFS | DO A M. | ABUS P M WABASH, §T. LOUTE & PACIFIC ABop m | ABw N, BIOUX CITY & PACIFIC. 81 Pacitic Express Denver Exprovs ookl Kxpress. B & M. IN NEB Mail and § xpross. Night Exy T#800U K1 Duy E. 6:dom dlm Arrive. PACIFIC A | » M. x press 6:2ha it Expross LB ST. )"k C. &. Via Plattamouth . 7:004 7:30 CNORTHWARDL Arvive. T. P, M & O (AN PK CE LT temins dally ; 6. dwily except Sun except Baturduy D, duily ex o STOCK YAWD TRAINS P. depot, Omnbin, 8t *0:40—7 S~ i—a 1Up— 0 ;25— 0 p._wm. Deuver Ex 1055 /

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