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THE BULLES AND THE KNIFE. A Resident Stabbed and a Stranger § Near the Capital City. DEATH SHROUDED IN MYSTERY. Murder Pronounced by One Case—~The Other Doabt—=Big Grist of Lincoln News the Jury in in M THE REE'S 1 ord of a day €oln yesterday v n murd in unc tal killing, urred in St twelve from o'clock yesterday morning Roberts went out to the location of the tragedy to hold an inquest and was ac companied by Deputy Sheriff Beach, who took with him the man who did the deed and who had given himself up to the authoritics. Before the left for the scene of the tragedy the man who guve himself up was questioned regard ing the aflair, but he disclosed nuthing, and the particulars that have reached th city are meagre and will be until the results of the inquest are known. The 0 occurred on the farm of Louis ud the partics to it William Ewarth and I an The troubie arose over a ssion, which waxed warm and wrathy Ewurth was whittling with a knife, and as the discussion reached its climax the two men clinched and Ewarth's knife entered the side of Mahs, ar the heart, whether accidentally or pur seems 1o be the question. When M he was stabbed he ran for a pitchfork, but fainted in the effort and in an_hour was dead. The two men are relatives, step- brothers, it 15 stated, and from the at tention the case is receiving at the hands of the coroner, it is evident that the ecase is being sifted to the bottom to determine whether it is accidental or felonious. LATER—The coroner’s jury found Ewarth guilty of felomously stabbing and killir and he is under arrest for murder The nd both 1 t The murder, or ever it ma, Creck } o 18 precincet, Coroner parties were Mahs s WAS IT SUICIDE? second tragedy that came to or | night before is s0 sh in my as to excite unive ttention. Sunday Sherif 'k was teicphoned to go three miles in the country, nsar the B. & M. track east of the ecity the body of a map found d waen the sherifl reached the T&ne e found the man yet breathing, and the I senger train was flagg brought to the city and to Cq s’ where he died v turning to sciousness described by the officer, ar g stranger was seen just at night sitting by the roadside. Some little time shot w heard, and parties ng that way saw the man lying by the wayside. ¥ Melick, on reaching the scene, found a revolver with two chambers empty lying by the man, and ch of the party disclosed no articles ot value in his pock- s nor any sers to furnish a clue to his identity. After reaching the city Dr. Carter was summoned, who found 4 bul- let hole in the side of the man’s head, which was probed without finding the ball. A wman working at the Peor house stated to the sheril’ that he knc the dead man, that his home was In Iowa, and that when he last saw him he had made threats to shoot himself because a girl had refused to marry him." In threatening to _ shoot himself he had requested that if any- thing happened to him mnot to mention his name, and for this reason the party making the disclosures refused to speak turther, and official acts in a corones court will be required to get the party name. This is the sherifl’s knowlgdge of the affair, and he is of the belief that 1t is a suicide. On the other hand. there i 1 opinion that 1t is a mur- and the evidence in that line is that in one place the dead man’s skull is crushed in and there are black and bruised spots on his Those who view the case us a murder point, further, to the fact that the hair on the head where the bullet enterea is unscorched, as though the shot had_been fired froni some little distance. The undertaking room where the body lies was visited through the day ye \y by fully 3.000 people to view the remains and, if possi- ble, identify them, but none succeeded I'he dead man is smooth-faced, some twenty-four years of age, and las not the appeara mp. Two thim- paper of needles found in his s lead to the supposition tnat he a tailor, HOLDING INQUEST Coroner Roberts to night commenced the examnation by coroner’s jury in the case of the supposed suicide, or murderes man. The proceedings as far as held be- fore adjournment succeeded 1n only still making the question of the man’s death one of greater doubt than cver, and the testimony taken points more to 2 murder that is shrouded in mystery. The wit- nesses examined are Dr. Carter, the offi- cers, who brought the body to 'the coro Bor; Otto Webb, Mrs. Ferguson and C. C. Thet estimony ot Pace was that a few hours before the man was found he had assed on the road where the tragedy oe curred in company with another young man, Webb testilied that he had fre- quently seen the dead man at his suloon, and when he last saw him_on Saturday he had some forty dollars in h. The testimony that came nearest throwing light on the mystery was that of Mrs Ferguson, — who paru identified the man as her nephew, William Chilson by name, whom she had not seen for three years, but who she felt guite posi- tive was her relative. The laust she haa heard from him was some two years ago when he was in jal in Dakota for shoot- ing a man, Mrs. Ferguson testified the man's father lived at Mankato, Miun.,and if no additional light is reached soon the officers will communicate with the parties at Mankato, and secure, if possible, the whereabouts of William *hilson, The jury adjourned at10:30 p. m. until morning, when an autopsy will be held and the search for evidence will be resumed. The excitement over the mystery is growing, and the impression fir-m- with'it that a case of murder will e unearthed, ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION. The Farmers' Loan and I'rust company has tiled its articles of incorporation with the secretary of state, the corporat is composed of Lincoln capitalists, with headquarters at the eapital city. The business of the company is recited at length to be the loaning of money on socurities—cither notes, t‘und. or realty; the buying, selling and owning of such seourities; the buying, owning, selling and improving of }amls aud lots, either for itself or others. The corporate limit of the company commences on the day of filing its urticles of incorporation and continues for ninety-nine years. The capital stock of the corporation is fixed at $120,000, divided into shares of $500 eaeh, to be paid in, 5 per cent. at the time of subscribing, and the balauce in suck installments and at such times as the board of directors may from time to time provide. The names subscribed to the nrticles are: W. B. Thompson, J. M. Doyle, C. L. Treviw, W, 5. Hawilton, W, ,atd | | 1. tervine, £ E { W. H. Blunt, C THER Barton, F. L J. Trivitt STATE GENERAL ITEMS The £3.000 bords issued by ¢ | precinet, Hiteheock county, were tered yesterday. These are court house bonds jssued to run twenty y a ent per annum, ard of public lan Sackett, <on and build of cay maintenance regar new home course ¢ the eitv and was board yesterd n w Ly Lun that he will be appointed as superinte ent of the feeble minded instit TOPICS IN THE CITY Yesterday in county J Parker, the case w ing of Brown for adultery lars of which were recfted in a former jssue of the BEk, which report some of the court officials felt confident and fear- ful would result in giving the case away and Jet the guilty parties escayp But the officers were on the alert and Janded Brown in cus: to answer to e charge luid up against him of dultery Jrown and the woman in the case had feared arr nd hac Brown going to Roca, where he tured, leaving the wom: at Courtland sup f full part When the case reaches a fins ought to send out a verdict put a damper on the cu about verage of one adulte The police has filed his monthly report with the eity council, and the re- port shows that it hus had before it cases of violations of the city ordinances in the month of July. Of these cases, so numerous in number, fully one-half were for drunkenness or drunk and disorderly, and most of the balan for viol n of the health ordinance, that requires citizens to keep their places in a reasonable state of cleanliness. The casi the police judge h fines for these violations foots up the sum of $4 It will be remembered that this business is only for violation of the city ordinances and does not cover nearly all of the business of the court during the month Messrs, Warner & Brown, proprietors of the new People's theater, have their house in course of construction foi theater in which to play companies that do mot compete with the stars, and it will be a house for the production of legitimate drama inst r, as has been provements the proprietors are making are such as to make the house one of the ¢ pleasant and commodious in the having in cases of state The rumor was afloat in the city yes- terday that a Tenth street physician had ttempted suicide, but it found on investigation that it was only rase of ng too much morphine to aileviate pain, and the bad results were an all mght's sick s therefrom. ‘he teachers’ institute commenced its two wee on at the high school building yesterday, with some fifty or sixty teachers present as the first day’s enroliment. The county superintendent 1s confident that the institute will be a great success both in attendance and in work accomplished when it gets well un- der Prof. W. W. W. Jones, state superintendent, was at home over Sunday after a week's work zmong institutes out in the Republican valley, and he took his departure yesterday for new fields of labor 1n other sections of the state where school teachers are congregated. A well-known stockman in the state, who has rc('c\nll‘\ returned from Chieago, reports that the Nebraska drouth is noth. ing at all compared to the dry climate of 1llinois and Towa, and that” crops n :}h..,« states arc being burned up with the heat, L. L. Combs, Valentinc, L. H.Ryder, Greenwood E. Yost, Omaha, C. Mc- Intyre, Sewa f D. ‘Gibbor Valparaiso; Falls Ci Wm. Valentine, Sam Barker, Plattsmouth; C. D. traw, George Hulbert, Nebraska J. Ducker, Red Cloud; D. P. Burr, \\wrnl- Nebraskans at Lincoln sterd City: J Omiha hotels slexion powders bave a vul gar glare, but Pozzoni’s is_a true beaut i r, whose effects are lasting. A capitalist and sixteen skilled work- men from Vienna, Austria, aided by American capital and the convict labor leased from the Kentucky penitentiary at Frankfort, will establish a factory at Frankfort for the manufacture of furni- ture at Frunkfort, n which pbeech is plenty dered worthle m in Gilead? no physician theret” to Dr. Pierce, there a balm m his “Golden Medical Discovery”—a “balm for every wound” to health, from colds, coughs, consumption, bronchitis, and all ehronic, biood, lung and liver af- fections. Of druggis et Randall Vaughn, of Paulding, Ga., was wounded in the battle of Waynesboro in 1864. A rifle bullet entered his body be- tween the breast bone and the point of his beart. Four years ago an abscess formed in the abdomen fourteen inches from where the ball entered, and the other day the ball was extracted from the abdomen, and Mr, Vaughn is recovering. Lo BE G s The Voice of the People. The people, as a whole seldom make mistakes, and the unanimous voice of praise which comes from those who have used Hood’s Sarsaparilla, fully justities the claims of the proprietors of this great medicine. Indeed, these very claims are based entirely on 'what the people say Hood's Sarsaparilla has done tor them. Read the abundant evidence of its cura- Ipo\\ ers, and give it & r, bonest Miss Phaebe Hall is attracting attention in Baltimore as an evangelist. She wus formerly a prosperous milliner, but, hav- ing been couverted, decided that there was something better than dealing in fur- belows, and so decided that her duty was to preach the gospel, and she is doing it in an acceptable manner, Prepared with striet d 1o Part rength and e ey R e !éu‘.-f:uu. v oc's Kxtracis Faalll Voo Orange. eie , Bavor delitiously: FRICE BANKG PO DER ©O., Chlcogo and St Louis WYOMING'S FUTURE GREAT. Oharacteristics of the Oountry Areund About Douglas. The Railroad Grade and Embryo Sta« tions West of Lusk—Progres ot the Work—An Immense Coal Bed to be De- veloped. . Wyoming, July 28—[Cor ¢ of the Bk |—Pre suntry is attracting so much just at present at 1 especially the new bly no to the REes county, writter I st 8 ant letter Lusk, in Lar reasons why cause of course the Wyoming Central Railroad an extension of the Elkhorn line westwasd, The dis- tance from Lusk to this place, Douglas, is just fifty-five miles by rail, or rather by the railroad grade. I passed over this line a day or two since, and carcfully noted the progress being wade,and every- thing in connection with this new route. The grading is completed to within about fifteen miles of this place, and nearly flnished the entire distance. At this writing, Wednesday, the track-lay- crs ure about twenty-one miles west of Lusk, or only thirty-four miles from Douglas, and arc now averaging nearly or quite two miles a d There are but few bridges to be built, in fact, only one of importance, that over Shawnee creck, and neither bridges or grading will he in the way of the iron gang any more Mr. Cunningham, who has the contract for laying the track, informs your cor respondent that he thinks he can reach Douglas easily by August 20th. There will probably be five stations between Lusk and Douglas, but the indi- ions are thut no towns of importance will be built The first station 'is eight and a half miles from Lusk, and wiil be called Sheep Ranch. It is in the Running Water valley, the stream nere being an 1nsign . billy country, not mnoted for either auty or fert! , and can be utilized to antage only for grazing purposes The next station is some nine or ten miles further on, and will very appro- priately Divide. It is located on the high or main divide between the headwaters of the Running Water on the east, and Lightning creek on the Wi It'is at this point that the traveler coming swest first sees and suddenly ymes 0 full view of the famous Lara i mie range immediate of whict a boom, t being the buildin of mounfhins, stretehing farther than the e magnificent view, cannot fail to impress the s! such. The country here r a broud expanse of rolling prairie, inter- spersed with abrupt hills and cliffs, with here and there a high clay butte with verpendicular sides, looking as though it was standing sentiy over miles of terri- tory. Owing to the great altitude at this point, and the entire ab: for miles in any direction, i that a sidetrack and section house will constitute the station of Divide. F Lusk to this point there is an almost continuous up-grade. From Divide westward there is a steady but very perceptible decline for miles, and the country is very handsome in- deed. The nexti station will be called Lost Creek, and is located on a little stream of that name. From an agricul- tural point of vicew, this s the best look- g section of the country on the line, and a garden of growing vegetables, or such vegitation as 1s usually found in gardens, give ample evidence that such a crop can be easily grown here without irrigation and with ordinary care. Asa grazing country this section is simply immense, and | can see no good reason why quite a little village should not be Built fere. The next station will be Sherman Creek, on the famous stream of that name, if stream it may be called. Itis twenty-five miles east of Douglas. From said point a branch railroad is to be built north five and a half miles to the ral- road company's immense conl ficlds, and where said company has already pur- chased 1,600 acres of coal lands. I can not see much here to make a town, although it will probably be quite a ship ping pomnt for coal and stuck. Except in the spring of the year when the snows are ..w\-ing. or when there are heavy rains, Sherman_ creck is not much of a Str t this time it is simply a river b nd and rocks, with here and there a stagnant pool of water. But sometimes, particularly early in the spring, old Sherman gets on the biggest kind of a tare and becomes a raging tor- rent hundreds of feet in width in piaces. There is considerable timber along its banks, nearly all cottonwood, and there are three or four beautiful groves, em- bracing an area of several hundred acres ench. After crossing Shawnee the railroad grade follows down a beautiful valley until it reaches the North Platte river, a stream that from bank to bank will aver- age nearly an eighth of a mile, but which at this season of the year is very low and full of sand bars, However, during sey- eral months in the year its banks are full, and it is a great river flowing seaward at the rute of five or six niles an hour, There is scattering timber along the Platte, nearly all of the cottonwood vari ety. The valley is broad and beautiful, There will probably :~ a station about ten miles east of Do, Jas, directly on the north bank of the river, bat I did not learn its proposed name Some four and a half miles cast of Douglas the road enters a peeuliar look- ing tract of country, about a mile and a half wide, known in this country as *“Bad Lands.” Such tracts are not infrequently found in Dakota and Wyoming, and are always denominated as above, whether great or small in area. These *'B Lands'’ look as though they might huve been formed by an earthquake or vol- canic disturbance, and the surta is simply & mass of ciay bills and deep gorges, with plenty of rocks thrown in promiscuously by way of season- ing and_ variety, und almost entirely barren of vegetation. Except perhaps for mineral purposes, they are not worth u cent a section. Imugine if you can, several square s an eruption and the bowels of the earth actually turn inside out, and you will g very fair i of the so- called “Bad Lands” of the west. For about a mile and a half the railroad will s through the belt above named, the de being now completed, and the nery here presented will ben great curiosity und study for the tourist, emi- grant or stranger. ng from said “Bad Lands" railroad enters she North Platte n, a beautiful tract of 1 iric from one to two and some five nules long, with an al most unbroken surface and an almost imperceptible decline to the river vank. It is nearly in the center of this tract that the uew town of Dou , eertain to be the future metropolis of W yoming, has been platted, ana of whic 1 will tell the ders of the BEE something about to- morrow, and all about it in the future, from y to da; —-— E. A Clark, U.S. Arehitect, Washing- ton, endorses Ked Star Cough Cure. 35 ceuts. sight, and ranger s belt val el plain miles wide d the | < country is having such | ut brook, and is surrounded by | AUGUST ! “HOLD THE EXPRESS The Story of How a Telegraph Lad's Philadelphia Tines there passed away an old man of threc score or more, Who had led a quict and apparently uneventful life, From a little Dbefore his middde sgo he had been a fol wer of 1 na for yeurs be fo ath known member of the t-board terie, or, as is more commonly called, u locomotive engineer Some 8g0 an occurrence took that may have Tont nowy night in December 8 ht train accident oceurred. through he breaking of & car ax The scene of the accident was portion of the road very crooked. The wreckers had been caliea out and with them th g tel graph boy, whose duty it was to climb n telegraph pole, make the necessary at tachments with wires, clamps, ete,, and to assist in the working ot other trains past the obstraction. This boy was en trusted with the important task of open ing and operating an additional ¢ Sitting on an impromptu chair, fence-rails and stones, at the fo telegraph pole, his duty was to stop all trains coming towards the obstruction and hold them until one of the tracks had been cleared. It was on s Saturday night, and but few trains—save the regular mght expr were running Clothe I unusnal x-1-~‘mns|lm|(.\ the lad sat throngh a terrible blinding snow and slectstorm, hour after hour, no shelter and no company save the constant tick of the little instrument that held him in communication with the outer world. One o'clock has come. The night ex press should be there, Orders have come rom the wreck, “Hold the express at all azards. A glance at the watch tells the boy that he must tuke his lamvs and meet the express as far above as possibl There were no air-brakes in _those day A heavy, blinding, checrless fog has se tled down like a thick cover over the deep cut in the rocks. The snow from above was still coming down 1n sheets. Plow ing his way through the wet snow over the uneven sur of rails and ties, went the boy in the direction of the expected express, whese faint rumble. could first be felt and then faintly heard. Planting himself firmly between the rails, the boy stood, & Jamp in cach hand, waiting to swing at the first burst of the headlight through the fog. Nearer and closer came the h f‘lr:lin. One second, two, thre and the headlight commences to 1ighten up the banks and rocks of the curve. The fog litts, the light gleams on the wet, shining rails. Swing goes the red lamp as the blinding glare of the powerful headlight shoots into sight at the upper end of the curve aster swings the red light. Noanswering blastof the whistle. The red light ison 3 desperate, almost airing swing. No answer yet. The boy leaps over the outer rail, into the ditch alongside, posing himsclf as he jumps, and as the great glaring monster is almost upon him his right arm puts almost guperhuman force into the swinq. the leaves his hand and ——tols u awah tha livtla @lass door in front of the engfiie’s cab, Tight into the face of our old friend the en- ginee ank back into the rocky fis the cut, the train rushes by him Iy, but with a terrible shriek of The old chain brake snaps sirained muscle and away rushes the express. past that clicking in- strument, on, on, iuto the darkness, out of sight, out of hearing and beyond re- call.” Slowly and wearily the boy plods his way over the ties to his post at the instrument, pondering over his unheeded efforts and the result. ‘‘Hold the express at all hazards!"—and where was that ex- presst There, withhis trembling fingers upon the key of the instrument, he sat trying to tell his ‘suverior officer at the wreck that his fforts to stop the express bad failed. This he did_without telling of the fate of that red light. Voices are presently heard through the darkness, d ere long the swaying of several lighted lanterns are to be seen as they come from the direction of the lost t)ai A few seconds later the eager, peering faces of the train men appear, and the boy recognizes the familiar faces of the conductor and brakemen of the express. The train bad stopped, but only a few yards away from the wreck, and the men had come back to pick up the operator, whom they had_supposed was mangled and dead in the cury above. The engineer, they said, had been badly hurt by some of the broken ke-chain. The boy is grateful and PP t is no worse. Ina min- ute or so the engineer—our_old friend— makes his appearance. Face covered with blood, which he had vaiuly tried to wipe away with bunches of greasy waste, a long cut just under the roots of his hair, told where he had been hurt. Throwing his arms around the brave boy's neck be whispered through his sobs of joy as the tears trickled down his blood-covered s asleep and you risked your life all. Thank God, you threw it it and true. 1 will be a diflerent man from to-niglit.”’ "Twas so. The tiue tale fore been told. That engine thenceforth a true, honest and sober one, The chain served as a pretext for the wound, and the fireman, who was nod- ding on his box, too. mever knew the true history. Death long ago came to him in the discharge of his dut, And now that the shades of death have closed over our old friend, peace to his memory. He bas gone to that final foot-board to t, where his *“runs” will bein pleasant places. sional mectings with his operator friend were always gentle, kind and full of affection, and no mention was ever made of the attemptto “hold the ex- press at all aazards —— ‘When Taby was sick, we gave her Castexia, When she was a Child, she cried for Castoris, When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria, Whaeo she had Childsen, sho gavo them Castoria A citizen of Albany, Me., who had a bundred gailony. of hard cider in his cellar, was rather surprised when he re- turned home and found his wife had turned the spigof to every cask and let it run out in the celar drain. Taking a ..('.m second thonglft, he said he was glad of it. Kirk's German Pile Olncment. Sure eure for bund, bleeding, and itching Piles. One box hys cured the worst cases of ten years standing. No one need suffer ten minutes after usifg this wonderful Kirk's erman Pile Ointment. 1t absorbs tuniors, lays the itching at onee, acts as a poultice, gives instand relief. - Kirk’s German Pile Ointment is prepared only for Piles and itehing of the private parts, and nothing el Every box is warranted by our agents. by druggists: sent by mail on receiptof price, e per box. DR. C, 0. BENTON, Prop, Cleveland, O, Sold C. ¥. Gooodman and Kuhu & Co. 15th and Douglus, 16tk #nd Cuming — W. 8. O'Brien, of Boston,found a pock etbook in which was §900. He at once set about finding the owner, and suc- ceeded at length. ‘I'ne book belonged to a Providencé man, who not only r warded O'Brien with money, but wrote letter to the Boston papers telling of O’Brien’s hoaesty, and giving him and his business an “advertisement that is likely to be worth much more than §00) to the honest Boston man R She has the complexion ot a Pozzoni’s Medicated Complexion Fowde, did it. Sold by all druggists. | dro | field | thousand mil Tall Nebraska Corn. McCook, Neb,, Jaly 81.—To the Editor the Bee: A great many reporte of n western Nebraska have been hed in the papers of Towa and the eastern part of thisstat I want to state that they are without foundation, so far art of We of pbl lease ¢ N was taken hundred a averag about e cult ted the lowa twenty-seven years and have been here for seven years, and I think I never had a better prospect for. a larg crop than I now have. W have »d country here. [ have trav. eled this state by team about two , and 1 like this country as ny place I have found I am a farmer and worked on a farm all my life. Parties wanting information in re- gard to this county address WiLLian CoLEMax, McCook, Neb., box 113 McCook, Neb, July We the un- aersigned residents of McCook are well acqoainted with William Coleman, and we consider hisstatements are reliable. ‘L. Brows, Cashier First National Bank. GeorGe HORKWELL, Physician A, THOMPSON Postm T, THE SAMPLE RECEIVED The sample of corn received measures thirteen feet in height and is very stocky A reporter of the Ber viated McCook ween it was only ihree months old, and en there were very few farmers in the In view of the crops that have ed there since, it is interesting 11 what was then the pobular opin ion: “We know this to be a good stock country, but we never expected to raise any crops 1 amount to anything.” The season before a colony of Russian Men- nonites had left the county near Culbert- son, a few miles west of MeCook. being literally starven out and ble to raise anything. It was said at the time that if a Mennonite. who i ays u first clas farmer, conld not make a living the vas no use in any other man's trying it The erops which have been raised in that county this season are additional eyi- dence that the county is changi that the great Americon de: retreating to the westward. a field ¢ I'he entire ven feet in about high a gz in Forfeit if not Havana Filler. {LAM GAR A GENTLEMAN'S SMOKE FOR 8 CENTS. Far il prove s represenied and willbe exten: v B every ton Tor ive Benters o wi {ata Tia merite aud push 11 accondingly SMOKE EL FERNO 10c C1GAR. Address BANGILRT BROS, Bolo Ageats, 180 Fifth Avenne, - CHICAGO RETAIL AT Leslie & Morrell, T. W. Spafford & Co., Parr, M. B, Powell, D. W, Saxe, C. F. Goodma: J. A" Fuller & Co., Cheney & Oleson, Kuhn & Co.. ' Sam Farnsworth, Yrapk Barrett & Co., Hugnos & Schmidt, Juwés Forsyihe. KEYSTONE MALT WHISKEY Specinlly Distilled for Medicinal Use. THE BEST TONIC! UNEQUALED for CONSUMPTION ASTING DISEASES and GENERAL DEBILITY. i PERFECTS DIGESTION DR. EDW. L. WALLING, Sur goon in Chief, National Guarc Mr. Lalor, Druggist, of and 1 hivo naed 8 fow b With fa hetter ficct thun h had. 1 am recomm your article Iy my practice, find it very N\!L(urmry"' BIWARE OF IXITATIONS. The Genuion has 1o Bigmture s FISNER & MENDELSON Fac-gimile of Bottle. ou the Label. EISNER & MENDELSON, (Sole Agraia for the U. 8) 816, 318 and 320 Race 8t., Philadelphia. Pa. Forsale by C. . Goodman, Omaha Nebrask i ESTABUSHED USEDINALL honanne’ 0> PARTS OF THE WORLD IER 200000 Py ol E@T( [ SOLD: —— 4 Prices on application. Boid by riage Butlders and Dealers. CINCINNATL U, K. A, 0% LINCOLNBUSINESS DIRECTORY Catal 000N, Lecently Bullt, Newly Furaisbed The Tremont, J. C. FITZGERALD & SON, Propriotors. Cor. §th and P5ts,, Lincoln, Net. Rates $1.50 per day. Stroet cars from Louse (o any | THE ENEMY Ree. FIUGH O PENTEC hoW h & YT, Pastor of Now Yo THE HOLWAN LIVER Tho Pad will prev IN THE 1have AIR! ity FRars with v K ot} 1 thaks s | Wash Drugs in Christe ' roam Siroet, N, ¥ PHANT. tom will Cure. DEWEY & STONE, FURNITURE One of the Best and Largest Stocks in the United States to Select From. OMAHA, NEB C.S. RAYMOND, RELIABLE JEWELER, Watches, Diamonds, Fine Jewelry, Silverware he lnrgest stock. Prices the lowost. Douglas and Property of every description for sale in all parts of the city. A complete set of Avstracts of Titlos of Doug Maps of the City, State or county, or any other county in Nebraska, frec of charge upon apphication. Fine repairing a speciaity, Al work warrantod. Corns th street, Omal C. E MAYNE, . LEADING REAL ESTATE DEALER, S. W. COR. 15th AND FARNAM, OMAFIA, Lands tor saie in s Connty kept, information desired furnished M. BURKE & SONS, LIVE STOCK COMMISSION MERCHANTS, ©B0. BURKE, Manager, UNION STOCK YARDS, OMAHA, NEB. REFERENCES: Bank, Kearney, Neb, i Neb. ; Omaha 1ii pay customers’ draft w Columbiis State Merchants' and Farmers' Bank, Davi Bank Omaha, Neb, 1l of lading attached for two-thirds City, Neb.: Kearney Natjonal Columbus, Neb.; McDonald’s Ban North e of stock —y AT COST And less than cost until closed ond, the large stock of DRY GOODS Boots and Shoes, And Gents® Fuirnishing Goods of the Boston Store G614 and 616 Aword to the @ 10th St. e is sujji Ceime and see for youwrselves, Jno. LINDERHOLM G14 and 616 10th st. DRUNKENNESS ©r the Liquor Habit, Positively Cured by Administering Dr, Haines' Golden Specific It can be given In & cup of coffce or ¢ thie knowledge of 1he person taking it s at Barmiess, ud will eiect o permaicilt and spee cure, whether the patient Ix a moderato crinker or an micoholle wreck. It bas been gven in 1houe nwads of cases, &ud in every Bas followed. ' It never Fstem once Jmpregnated with the Speciie, It becomes an utter Impossibility for the liquor Appetite to exist FOR SALE BY FOLLOWING DRUGGISTS KUHN & 0., Cor. 15th and Douglas, and 18th & Cuming Sts., Omuha, Neb. A.D. FOSTER & BRO. Conncil Bluffs, Towa. Call or write for pamphlet containiog Lundreds o ot on s (rot the BESE WORED A0 men 1Fom Rl Darts of Ui counLv- 3 ber 16, 1876 A POSITIVE::, e v the most obtina case in four ditys or less. Alan'sSoluble MedicatadBaug es No nauseous doses of cubebs, copalbao 0 of sradalwood that are certain 1o produce dyspe, #ia by destroying the coutings of the siomach, Price $1.50. Bold by all druggists oF mailod on receiptof price. For further particulars sent forcireular. P. 0, Box 1333, 7. C. ATLLLAIN CO., &5 John st.. Now York. os-Lh-eatly o ke Ouro without modi- cine. Patented Octo- DREXEL & MAUL, Buooessors to J. G, Jacobs UNDERTAKERS, AND EMBALMERS. At tho 0ld stand, 1407 Faroam St Orders telegraph solicited and prompily siteadod to. Telephone No. &2, part of the olty. “J.H. W, HAWKINS, Architect, Offices—33. 54 and 42, Richards Block, Lincoln, Neb. Elevator onlith str Breoder ot GALLUWAY CATTLE. F.M \\'(m;J:. 3 Live Stock Auctioneer Snles made in all parts of the U 8. ut fair rates. Koom 3, State Block, Lineolu, Neb, Golloway and Short Horn bulls for sale. B.H.GOULDING, Farm Loans and Insurance, Correspondence i ard 1o louns solicited. Loum 4, Richards Block, Lincoln, Nob Public Sale, Denver, Col e 1OLh, 1886, 40 head of Show Short Horns. Bates & Crulos shank, Z-year-olds, weighing 1650; Lulis aund heife Address Field und Farw ar e oy ues, Denver, Col. . M. Bransou, Lincoln, Nel Col. F. M. Woods Auctiou a 1 Lincoln stop at Na':txonal Hotel, Aud get 4 good dinuer for Se. J.A FEDAWAY Prop Convalescents. lisqLires i cooking . QU BOLE. The Care and Feeding of Infants, wailed fres. DOLIBER, GOODALE & ©0., Boston, Mess NERVOUS PEOPLE And others suffering fro Dervous debility , exbhusdi WEAK, Erf"f.‘"%ummfi"’sfl.fl::. et W J. HoRME. LWVENTGR. 18] Wasass Av. Chicang. CARRIAGES SENT C. O. D. ONE_ 01 MORE AT 1 PAY all expr BABY milex. 1,000 car Btanp for iliust alog L. G. SPENCER'S TOY FACTORY, 221 W. MADISON ST., CHICAGO. B=ailway Time 0) The following is the Table HA. time of arrival and de- parture of trains by Central Standard Time a oul depots. Trajus of the C. M. & rrive und depart from thoir depot, corner of 14th und Webstor streets; trains on the B, & M. C.B. &Q.and K.C., 5. J. & C. B. from the B. &M dejot all othirs from the Union Pacifio depot. 3 BRIDGE TRAINS Bridge trains will leuve U, P. depot at 6:35— 53100 00 . m.: 151 :00 2 11310 p. m. Leave Trausfer for Omaba at 7: ~-742--B10:35—-10 ECTING LINES Arrival and departure of trains from the Transfer Depot at Councll Blutts: DEPART. ARRIVE, CHICAGO, ROCE IRLAND & PACIF, B 6oy, | CHICAGO, BUBLINGION & QU A 9355 A M, | A B0:40 P, 0! i I A | WABASH, ST. LOUIS & FACK Ad00p. M, | SIOUX CITY & PACIHC. AT A M. Aoz vu " Depurt. A [} 10:658 - ‘ 5i06n 8:108| Xpross ‘Local Express & M. IN NEW. Mail und Express. 1N Expross TDopurt. SOUTAWARD, A M. | P oL MISSOURI PACIFIC. 11:108) Duy Expross 9:10b| " Night “Bxpr | K. C., 8T. J. & 9:200 Busb).. Vi Plattsmouth " Depart NORTHWAKD, ~ AN 1N G, BT, P, M. & O, |. Sloux City ¥ 8:45c/0akland_Aoec B & Q Finitemouth o B, duily except Sum- day: D, duly except 25800 p. m. Denver Ex, 10:5 yards for Onaba at *7: 250 8:3) 4 88 —6;05—28:50 p, m. lo® 0. ¥ P e 805