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HIE SLEPT ON THE RAILROAD, Jack Gallagher Out in Two in the B, & M, | o s | Yards at Lincolu, NEW MISSOURI PACIFIC GARD A Train to Be Put coln and Omaha—Reported Coal Find-Other Capi- tal City News. on Between Line 1¥i To the another About 5 nien THE DER'S 11X t of violer deaths in Lincoln adaed terday in the morning work yards ck the lying ¢ me was ¥y ock &M n the lated of a whes discovered mutitated re ross the rail crushing over him had wbout the waist and well body into two picces Onearm was also cut off and there was no evidence that the dead man had moved or even groaned after the cars had crossed over him. At what time the not definitely probably some hours before the overy of the remains Coroner Roberts at an early hour was ul the body was taken to the morgue, where it was identified and pre- "he man’s name was Jack Gallagle s had been at work for Cushing, Mallory & Co., out on the grading work of the 1B, & M. Blue Hill extension. In company with a force of workmen he had come on to Lincoin to commence work on the new B, & M. line between A<iland and Wahoo. Saturday night most of the men went on to the Asnland work, but Gallagher remained in Lancoln. ILis supposed that he was drinking, and in the early part of the mght went down to the railrond s to sleep. Where he was Killed was on an out of the way siding, with sunflowers and w high on each side of the tr s During the night a couple of ¢ loaded with bridge timbers were thrown in on this track, and it is likely that he, aslecp on the rails, was run over at that time. Gal 1er was a single man, and there were a number i the city who knew him and identified him. He had only a little change in his poeket, and the coroner will attend to his burial to-d From all that is learned of the death it is probable that, like a multitude of other like ac dents, it contains in itself a temperance lecture, and further illustrates the almost certain results that arise from sleeping on a railroad. THE MISSOURT PACIFIC a1 mains man The in struck him at nigh severed t accident occurr known, but it w was | pany THE OMAHA DAILY over the Sabbath that have been regis. tered in the city for months, abl of whicn cither illustrates that the city and its ho tels are growing in favor with the com mereial brotherhood, or that they are just now uncommonly plenty in the land J. H, Ferr representative on he road of Miss Kate Putnam and her com in the city yesterday arrang s for his attraction to appeay lay morning the vation neat that had been made for r pipes, heard the gling at the bottom of the onching, they found him I'hey putlec him to the restauran ek y rner ster police, in n ¢ Quick’s ¢ man stry ind appr y on his head nd helpea vorked. 1 lain there t have far differ police vesterday arr by the unusual nar who is wanted in ( watch and 85 in ¢ on the bottoms resuted stolen property m a house of 1ll-fame in that section. When the oflicers miss any- thing they ean generally get trace of it in that part of the city W. L Cody was the n who was creuting a disturbance near the St. Charles hotel yesterday. Ie was drunk, and passers-hy babored under the impression that he had snakes. When coming up- street and opposite the stor of I rriend & Son, he amused himsclf by Kicking a box and applying all sorts of epithets to it in s zy way. Oflicer Malone met him at this period in his dis E od carcer and escorted him to the coolest cell in the city jail HefMner, the erack bitcher of the coln base ball elub, is at home, laid up with a lame arm, caused by too uctive work in the box with the Denver nine. Ho is recuy 'k games T'he democ county, through their county eommittee, have alled their convention for the 23 of eptember, to be held at 2 p. m. of day at Fitzgerald hall. The primaries cet delegates to this conyention will be (d on the 21st. The Lincoln base ball club meet the stings club in two exhibition games to y and to-morrow on the grounds of the Hastings. The next league games in Lincoln will be played the week of the r—five games with the St. Joe nois par m out h A n search dow in finding the me of party To-day is the time set for lies injunction ease brought by ¢ in’ Lincoln against David H. Hyr using union Jubels on boxes of non-union The case promises to be not at tevesting 1 many citizens who hope by personal appeals (0 sceure better strect light facilities in their neighbol hoods, and the approach of long nights lends additional weight to their argu- nients The state fair entries are boom- ing at the oflice of Sceret Furna. has informally announced the new changes that it will make at an early day in tho runmng of trains, which will imuch accommodate Lincoln tr: us the pres- ent time card is crude, uncertain and un- satisfactory, and of little use and benefit except tor the little localtraflic. The new card will include a direct train to Omaha which leaving hereat 11:45 a. m., will get to Omah: ro 3 p.m. and allow people time for a fow hours business at the me tropolis before business closes, This train, leaying Lineoln midway in time between the two B, & M. Omaha trains, will undoubtediy command a liberal pat- ronage from those who journey between the two cit With these additions it is lir car to go through to St hout change will be added to n out of Lincoin, and during ate fair here extra jocal ut on for the accommo- vel W RAILEOAD TOWYS, orthwestern road, now building remont to Lincoln, has the iron v three or four miles th fe of the eapital of Saunders county. Six miles this side of Wahoo grounds have been secured for the town of Swedenburg; six iles farther on toward Lincoln will be the town of Ceresco, and six miles from Ceresco, ov the line in Lancaster county, will be located the town of Davey. This is twelve miles out of Lir- coln, and no towns will be laid out be- tween the two at NOT Y. LED. 1t is stated the papers have been out for al days in an adultery case, that if shown to the light of the courts would make an_interesting hearing, and an item almost, if not quite, sensational It is rumored that the parties in the cas quite well known, that the man is living with a woman who has taken his name upon herself, which aroused the anger of the genuine wife, so that she swore to the complaints, She didn’t eare g0 much about prosccuting, but she didn’t propose to have another woman going arvound with her own righitul name. from down no 1S 1T A COAL FIND? y cor Conrtnay was calied tract of land that he owns, sit- miles out of the eity, where he coul dhscovery had been made reported to him as a rich and former miner named been prospecting on th Jand for some time, and if th ion for the statements a ng is opening up for Lincoln Mr. Courtnay in ticu- Yestor out to uated tiv nad word and which w find, A farmeor Coulson tract of is oy are in generul a1 I LOCAL ITEMS, c n,of Lincoln lrve been flirting among themselves and with the people for some time, knocking the price down to $8.50 a ton 4t one time, but only to stay a short time, This great re- duetion was made when tho news first came of the contomplated loeation of the Pomeroy Coal company in_Lincoln, but before that company arrived the prices crawled up to $0.55 n ton, and the new firm quotes that price with the old ones. It is stated, however, tha the old tirms desire to shove the price up ton, but that the new company od to lot it remain where it is. Tf srmination in what it has lacked u coal firm outside of the Cameron pool that is satisfied with vhat must be a good thing, and will not e every few weeks to tuck up fuel s out of all res jonal bank has just re- ceived a new Corliss safo, the first one to be introduced in this city. In the efforts to get it in their building, however, the huge mass of iron got the advan: the workmen, and when suspended” over tho walk it took a tumble, erushing the timber like egg shells, and the safe itsolf was injured so that the tirm from which it was pu e rapl come and inspeot ver, tl wost serious accident in conneetion with it was the breaking of & workman’s leg by a flying piece of timber. The work- man, by name James Maggard, was taken to his home, the fracture reduced, and he was yesterday in a fair way to as speedy recover as s broken limb would allow. ; Eight pilgrims Sundayed in the city jail waiting to recount to the court their Saturday night's experience in celebrating in Lincoln. Four of them had, when searched, the total sum of a nickle be- tween them, and there is for them the brightest possibie chance that when the judge sits upon them to-day he will con- sign them for o goodly number of days to street work, which from the appearance of them will be a new departure, that s, the work part will be new. Architect Kowhns has the plans pre- d for the new fountain in Govern- t square, which, if it doesn’t improye the taste of that life saving fluid, will greatly improve the appearance of the square, which needs improvements of some kind bad enough. Lincoln hotels yesterday noted the largest attendance of traveling men for Saturday Hitcheock county entered the ace for county exhibits, Neither of the injunction cases brought Judge Pound by the Missouri inst the B, & M. regarding cklaying at the stock y ached n hearing, and the compan evi- dently settiing outside of the courts. At the hotels in Lincoln yesterday we following, among other voints: oJ. L. Hutchins, Ter, Omuaha: Carl King, S. H. I, Clark, J. M Omaha; B. Coldren, Eagle; H. G- B i B. ¥. Hake, North Loup; 1, 1. B. Fuller, Omabz. am Jones on Editors, teh to the Cincinnati Comuw tte from Moundsville, W. V : 'he attendance at the mp round to-day the rgest ever nown in the history of the ociation istimates range from 20,000 to 000, ovle came by thousands from all the nd towns within a radius of one hundred miles, and the result was titude much greater than could be s commodatea or fed. Thousands had to o without dinners, and even water v btained with difficulty by many m Jones preached in the mory bout 10,000 people, and at might 1o 000. No further references newspapers were made by the ist, but people still di cteristic allusion to the Intellig v ing. the norn- to the somewh editor was as follov I know the nows, can garble what I s pd misrepresent me, but I tell you the congregations to which I preach I'belicve they understand me. 1f newspapers could haye hurt me 1 would have been dead long ago. If suc little whipper-snappor, onc-horse editors as the one here on the ground yesterday syith his shirt-tail tull of type eould ha their way [ would have been dead long ago. I have been swallowed by whalcs and gnawed at by minnows, but this 1s the first place I have ever been troubled with ants. Brother Bodiey halloos: “Amen,’ and I expeet many a one would halloo the same if he woild halloo his sentiments. Right 15 vight, and T know, brethren, that if I pleasc the newspapers and politicians of this conntry I will'd please God. Let the newspapc soliticians howl. ~ That_is my doctrine. Cries of Amen, Amen. ] The newspapers say they made me, and 1 asked an editor one day if he could make another one i and he said he eouldn’t; said dn’t any more dirt.” . B enton’s Hair Grower Al who are BALD, all who are beconiing BALD, all who do not want to bo bald, al who ' are troubled with DANDRUFK, or TICHING of the sealp; should use Benfon’s Hair Grower. E1aurv PER CENT of those using it have grown hair. It never falls to Stop he hair from faling, Through sickness and fevers the halr sometimes talls off in a ghore time, and althougli the person may haye remained bald for years, if.youuse Ben- ton’s Hair Grower according to directions on_are sure of & growth of hair. In hun- dreds of cases wa have produccd a good growth of Hair on those who have been bald and glazed for years we have sully substan- Lated the following facts: We grow Hair in 80 easos out of 100, no or ow long hald, other prepa i tions, it contains no gar of lead, or vegetablo or mineral and its ns. 1tis alspecitia for falling balr, dandrum, and itehing of the scalp. rhe Hair Grower is & hair food omposition s almost exactly lik whith supplies tho hair witlh 1is DOURLE AND TRIPLE STREN Whon tho skin is very tough and hard, and the follice 13 apparently electually olosed, the single strength wifl sometimes fail to reach tiie papilla; in such cases the donble or tiple strength should be used in_counection \With the single, using them alternately. Price, singie sirength, $1,00; ~doubls strength, $2.00; triple strength, $3.00. 1f your duggists have Dt got it wa wil sond it opared on_recoipt of prica. " - P ENTON TATR GROWER O Sold by C. . Goodman and Kubn & Co. 16th end Duu:l_lc. 15th and Cumin, Jamos Lyon, of Elmara, N. Y., desired a photograph of his fine St. Bernird dog. When the dog saw the camera pointed at.him he suspocted that something w wrong. and bolted ont of the door. He was conxed back and posad again. Agam e took alarm, and, the door being shut, {mped out of a window, folt on ai wn: ng, broko through, fell on two young men, smashed ahat flat, and terribly scared & small colored bootblack. dog weighs 150 pounds s Why sufier the tortu: of billiousness when Hood's Savsaparilla will give you reliaf Sold by all druggists. 100 doses One Dollar. - The Bible society cheap. Depository In Y. M. L For Sale Cheap—290 head ge pony mares. Apply en premises Willard Fisher. Farm'one mile north of Anchor Mills, and six wmiles southwest of Omaha. nas_Bibles for sale C, A. rooms. of a| Lin- | ’imsrom' OF EARTHQUAKES. | | A Summary of the Record for Thirty-five Hundred Years. RAPID GROWTH IN NUMBER | The Charleston Shake the Most Dis- astrous Recorded in the United Ancientand Modern Compared States Upheavals s Globe Democrat wre general both as r 1time. No part of the known and year is y free from th onvulsions of s have found, Sept country u wbsolut to man, no nature eismo! ow that they are most two t the itic ocenn on ever numerous with gre border zon wround the Py the Ameri continent, and the central zone join ing the northern sith the southern hem- | In the first named zone is the of the Andes 1n South the Pacitic coast of North ith Kamschatka, Japan and he Mississippi valley Ably be considered as balong- zone. ‘The other earthquake Syria, Spain, Italy, Greece, Asin Minor and North Afriea. That portion most subject to earthquakes is Central America, the Antilles g East Indian Avehipe Othe are known which are consid in zones isphere, et would pro ing to th arca include 0. not areus of these has its cente extends to Sc nd Another is Central the great Erglish perhaps made the most important contributions yet given to this branch of science, estimutes the number of recorded earthquakes up to 1850 as 6,71 He divides them into five time groups, the first figure column giv ing the ¢ number in each pe the second the number which i , and the third the num- od in ench period, One nd named Teeland, ) in r. Robert Mallet, seismologist, who thus: Total. Disastrous. Year. Recorded before the Christian era Thence to end ninth century Thence to fifteenth cc Tihence to eighteent) Thenee to 1 1,700 900 600 300 50 A glance at this the number of carthquakes ha all ap- pearanees, vastly inereased since the be- ginning of the Christinn era. Just how much of this increase is due to the more careful study and registration ot the phenomena in the past ecentury or two than previously, to the v area of the earth inchided in the records,cannot, of course,be definitely known. The opin’ jon is general among scientists, howeyer, that earthquakes are growing in number although, perbaps not in- severity. ‘Lhe vin the half centiiry end- ) was sixty-four, while the records show that ninety-seven were noted throughout the wovld in 1875, and 104 in 1876, The annuw verage of the past ten years has been more than one hundred Professor Perre; expert, believes he betwe rthquitke moon. The numler of these phienom is greater at the time of the sy when the sun, moon and 1 fireet line of cach other) than at th of the quadratuers (when a line dry from the sun to the earth and thene the moon would 1 right angle the earth). According to this theor exrthquakes are more time of new or of full moon than when the moon is half full, either at the clos of the first quarter or the beginning of the fourth &n-\\' moon occurred on Sun- ast, only abont twenty-four hours the severe shocks in’ Greece and ind the slight ones in North Caro- South Carolina and Georgia, and only about forty-eight hours before the | areat enrthquake wi ay night. Professor Perrey ry on comparison of thousand obser- vations. Perrey also believes he has detected a connection between earthquakes and sensons, the number being groatest at the time of the equinoxes of March 20 and | Septembe t the solstices of June 21 and December 21, partienlarly around September 20, Mallet’s researches lead him to the belief that the largest number ceeur at about the time of the winter sol- ¢, or December 21 ‘thquakes are now generally he d to be due to several causes, the principal ones baing (1) the cooling of the interior of the earth and the constant shrinking of its shell-like erust, and (2) voleanic action in th of disturb- ance. Conneetion between voleanoes and earthauakes has been traced with a great degree of aceurs Thus there are known to be a zone of active voleanoes extending through beits of the earth co- incident” with the earthquake zones ro- ferred to above, onc of which reaches from the Andes, in South Amerien, north- i ward throngh Central America and Mex- ico, uiong the Sierrn Nevada and Cus- cade mountains of the Pacific const of the 1 States, to Alaska and the Aleutian nds and thenee to Asia. Another vol- zone extends from from Central America to the Lesser Antiles, under the Atantic to the Mediterranean sea, through Arabin, the Red sea, the Persian gulf and India, Vesuyius, Etna and the other great voleanoes of central and southern Europe belong to this zone, Vesuvius, it be remembered, st into operation, after a long pe netivity, just before the earthqu: Saturduy in Greeee and Ital mologi howeyer, now incline pretty gene! to the beliet that volea- noes and cthquakes do not stand to such other in the relation of cause and 50 much us they represent different pifestations of the same subterrancan ‘The only active voleanoes in the States ave in the Sierra Nevadu and Caseade mountaing, near th fie ud yet the earthquake of Tues- ¢ night, as well as many preccedi ones, was mueh more destruclive on the Atlantic const than in tho Mississippiv al- ¢, while there is no record of any shock for weeks past on the Pacitie slope. Re garding the ultimate cause of either carthquakes or voleanoes science has de- veloped nothing satisfactory to the major- ity of seismologists. Spain, Portugal, Italy, Greece and many pirts of Asia were repeatedly vis- { ited by destructive earthquakes in the past, many disastrons ones being re- corded before the beginning of the | Christian The most memorable European earthquakes were those which occurred at Antioch, Syria; Naples and Calabria, italy, and’ Lisbon, Portugal That at Antioch took place in A. 1. 526, in which 259,000 persous lost their lives. ‘Chis was the most disastrous of which there is any record. The earthquakes at Naples oceurred in 1456, and 60,000 per- sons were killed. In 1693, 60.000 lives were lost in the earthquake at Calambria. The destruction of life at Lishon in 1755 was also about 60,000. On the American continent, the West celebrated s traced norels nd the age ot the | mwept across | done'to ¥ | were fe | 1872 Indies, Mexico, and most of the Central Ameriean and several of the Scuth American states have frequently been visited by disastrous earthquakes. One of the most notable of these ocour- rences was that which partially destroyed BEE: MONDAY, the seaport td 1[G Arica, Peru, in 1808, and which produced ave that he Pacific ocean, reaching the Hawasiian islands and the Japanese and Australian co The most notable ever oceur United States was that which visited New Madrid, Mo, in 1811, The ground undulated repeatedly for several v district 300 miles north and south, and 100 miles east and west, being affected, Much damage was ngs pping. Lakes ral places in the d od agam, by the and sidences of Ihe next most iquake ocenrring in the ttes was that of November 18, in New England. Thi posed to have had the Sume took place m L fore. Much proy Boston and other places in visited, Another of irred in New England on Octobe ), 1950, Calif edin 1852 and Consic to property was done in both instancs Lone Pine and other mining settlements in N were partially destroyed by an quake in 1871 nesday night's yisitation, therefore, was the most destruetive to property of any earthquake which ever oceurred in the United States, and was the only one in which, practically, there was any loss of life. - A FORTUNE IN A HORSE. earthquake which 1| trict nay T \ the ¢ surface mem, n days be destroyed in the district shocks oc Henry ~Dollar Million, ald: “Do you see that here with the big cane,a slouch N two glassy-looking eyes—the one whois justhnow trying to buy an auction pool? That man made more money ot of a trotting horse than any other man bver made, and he did it right herein Chicago, too. How much? Al most a million. Yes sir; pretty nigh a clean million dollars, And he made it 1 oft one horse, too. The old man’s ame is Graves— Henry Graves. Way back in the forties he kept a_public house out on the Cottage rove road. His place was & quict resort for horse- men, and Graves w horse sharp him- self. He had as keen an eye for horse- flesh—1 mean trotting horses, for like all the old-time horsemen he wouldr’t go across the road to sce a running horse or A running race any man I ever knew. One day he bought a horse right out of a rm wagon in front of his tavern, for $100. He had sized ner up for a trotter, and he made no m stake, The mare turned out to be a trotter of the first water for the and with her Graves won scores of good races. CAt that time W, 1. Myrick had lie house not fi also a trotting horse m: Kk Rossiter, a crack flyer, 1 rivalry sp up between the two Tand- lords ais to which had the faster animal They were not lowg in making up a race which was won by Lady Jane, aves re. Myrigk wisn'tsatistied, and tried it aguin, onlyto be beaten the second time. But he wouldn't give up. Hemade another mate) i lost, and still another ana s 'r, never stopping until he had lost straight races, And he wouldn't stopped then if he hadn'. runout of maney to back his horse with. Those were great; races, I tell you—two- mile heats, most of then s of ex- citement and heavy betting. It scems loxmw we never any such races now- ads About Grave's million dollars? Oh, ves. Though he, backed his mare with all he could rake and scrape, he didn’t in a million in money of cotrse. But 1 tell yon wiwt he did--he won' fifty- cight acres of land lying just west of Cot and between wh and Thirty-fifth streets. Onestory is that Myrick used to own this land, and that he bet it against £3,000 with Graves on th, eventh and Jast race and lost. Graves denies ths, ro He old man , and he He owned irchased the mare, rned him the money How that is [ don’t that ¢ made He held to the before he and thatthe mare ¢ to pay for it with. knoyw, but it is c the land with that 1 property antil the city had grown all around him, and a few years ago sold it out, excepting his own home, for a sum ranging between 00,000 and $900,000. “Strunge as it may scem, Myrick rich out of those races, too. The eleven defeats cost hun nearly everything he had, and he was finully compelled to sell his horse. The ing purse was % b and most of this he invested in land, and the rise in the value of the land made bim thy man. Itwason the si of M, vern t John B. S man, from the Bull's Head, Sout Side Chicago stoc wes' land Camp Doug- ed el tract 15 now vith bundreds of handsome ric coming I the fi and on s establ d over dwellings.” It is well known that the imhabitants of stern nations shield themselves ous disorders by wearing wtic Gums on the pitof the stomach. tincts are right, for strong per- anent odors are antagonistic to the hy. orms which eause ¢ . For thi renson Allcock’s Porous Plasters, being composed of fragrant aromatic gums, are the best safeguard to wear on the pit of the stomach in cholera time, or in lo- 8 where sewer and found. They not only prevent infection, but will cure diarrhdn, dysentery, chol ra and bowel complaints. g L e 0 sita of the ancient city of Susa Frenchmen have just carted iway forty tons of relics—fragments of frieze, bronze coins, and statuettes in _bronze, i v, terra cotta, and marble. Itis the hacalogical haul made for a . At first the expedition en- countered much opposition from the iyes, owing to a report that the Frenchmen waated to i v the body of the prophet Da posed to buried in a ¢ borhood, & greuf obj no use for speetacles if McLean's Strengthen- ing Eye Salve noves the film and seim which ac s on the eye balls, subdues inflammation, cools and sooths the irritated nerves, strengthens weak and failing sight. 25 cents a box The Frenceh Aeademy of Medicine has been oceupying isself for some time with the injury dane the pubiic health by the horrible compounds -with whieh the low cluss cabuls are NOw poisoning their customeps all over France. The marked incremsse jn the statistic of in- sanity' 18 uniw@ally attributed by the profcssion to tettonic and maddening substances whel the stuff sold ns wine and absinthe it these establishments drugged. ‘Theacademy strongly i large reductior in the number of lic houses. t ot of pilgrimag You will hay you use Dr. J -1 nsed ——— The rosy frethness and a velvety soft ness of the skir 15 invariably by " those who use Pozzmi's Complexion Powder ~ Peaback is siia to be the Indian name for Smithville, N, J., on the Raritan river Nearlyy century agoit wus col- onized by Zachariah, son of a John Smith, and descendants of his have lived there ever sines, Zachariah's son Peter, who was born Christmas day, 1808, still lives in the old homestead, and six gen- erations of the family, numbering 8,000 persons, met in annual reunion at the family homestead lately. -~ For beanty,toreowfort, for improvement of the skiu, use \uly Pozzini's powde: {PTEMBER ¢ which | 6. 1886, THE BARTENDING BUSINESS. The Hard Lot of New York Bartenders Golden Opportunities Swept Away, | The New System—A Bartender is Given a Certain Quantity of Liquor for Which He Must Retan a Certain Sum of Moncy, ( wre Joe Howard in Boston Kinds of busines methods Even the bartending business has under an evo within the last when a bar by the with what conld tre s often as hie pleased, and at the year orso buy out the proprie tor or set up anopposition shop on the opposite corner, have departed never to return. The relies of this good old sys tem linger only along the demoeratic avenues and side streets, but in the high wned and first-c places it is all changed, and the bartender is kept down to the pin of his collar to make the per contage which the proprietor demands This percentage 18 something enormc over 300 per cent in some of the so'« « Sfancy” or sporting places. In all the hotels the liquor is measured out in the mornimg, and the bartenders must show returns te ain amount, or clse they will be invited to put on their best elothes and take 1 vacation without pay or pros- pect of ever gettin, K Of conrse you are aware of the general complaint that the very poorest and meanest hiquors are to he found in some of the biggest and most fashionable hotels, and there is more trath than im- agination in these complaints. What ean a bartender do? He is called upon to returnsome 200 per cent and more profit, and if he has arun of customer who take big drinks he would be swamped and driven out on the tramyp, if ne did not resort to the eroton or some other means of making up, Or suppose nted to go to a baseball g or on his day oft, and he w fow dollars to cover his expense to fill up the little hole he » receipts. Again some of ssible to the night watchman and h snds, and when they help themselves of course they resort to the Croton to cover up the tivpling and deceive the vartenders. The poor eustomer suflers forall this. So you see the comp against hotel whisky and brandy are not without grounds. "I'he liquors arc not left under the vartenders to take what they please and return what money they wish. The head barkeeper comes down in the morning and gets the keys from the elerk, who finds them in the safe, where they have been locked up all night He opens the bar, takes stock and sees what will be wanted for the day. He cannot order this verbally, buf must the order to the it out and furnishes all bottled up ar ¢ for use. This written order 1s held inst the head bartender, and when the settling up «wes if the proceeds do not meet the standard percentage then there is a split and the head bartender will find his ten- ure of offic y the moncyis all taxen by is tittle chance of making as a general thing the © s to depend upon hissalary. The percentage is 800 per cent. Among other hotels it ranges from 200 to 300. One hotel has been discharging ¥ tenders for not coming up to the required average, man who gets out in the cold on that account has little chane of gefting in any other hotel, the hotel proprictors hiave an associ and compare notes on these and points of mutual inte: yet it may not be the bartenders There may be a ran of big drinks, or a customer may aecidentalfv upset a bottle of brandy, and, seeing that 1t was an cident, the bartender does not feel | making him pay for it. He must be civil to the customer, There may be glory and fame in working in high-toned hotel, but the man who works in a good corner saloon_on _one of the avenues is much better off. He is not tied down to the percentage. He can tr his friends when he pleases and take a nip himself, and in a year or so can have a saioon of his own and take away his employer's atrons. But, light as the hotels sir profits, the fancy places run up like the mercury on a hot day. A barman who work Tom Gould’s as to produce $13 for ewerv bottle of brandy and $28 for every | beer. How is that for profif? any wonder that keepers of pi Tom Gould's would make u tough to obtain license In most of the sum- mer places they have a different systom There the bartenders work on aperc age. They ved with so much liquor of all kinds, and are expected to miake so much out of it, of which they receive n certain percentige. These bar keepers have devised ittle schemes by which they can do a considerable busi- ness of their own. For instance, the, quietly buy stuft of ti own, and smuggle it into the bar and sell that in- stead of the stuft measured ont to them by the storckecper of the hotel. By doing this they ¢ the whole 300 or 400 per cent profit themselves, But they must be careful in this business, and do it only to a certain extent, so that they will not be suspected. But if they y sold u couple of hottles of brandy’in th day itwonld give them §12 or §15, which is not bad in hard times. 1f a man finds himself tied up, hemmed in, or curtailed in his rights, he will find some of loosening the chains and cvading the iron rulers. But now, talking on general principles, A man will really get a better drink of plain whiskey or brandy in a table avenue saloon than he will get in o big hotel. Son o an eypert testitied before a le; ommittee that he found wors in u big hotel than he did in any part of the Tourth ward- You see the hotel propri will insist on having 250 or 500 pe orofit. The bariender knows he will lose his pl he dovs not produce that, and_the must necessarily be poor liquo decent avenue saloons this is notthe ease, and the bartender hus no temptation to doctor. Again, the hotels for their ens- tom depend on 1 who would not be seen going in an ordinary barroom, and therefore they think they have got them in any case, while the avenue saloon has to depend entirely on the quality of its | goods to carry it through pit up among the strong and active opposition which is all around i -~ No Uncertainty, ‘There is no uncertainty about the effect of Chamberlain's Col Cuolera and Remedy. No one need to single hour if they will take one or two doses of it. - Baldwin county, Alabans )b bly the oldcst voter in the United States in the person of Thomas Ga t, who is one hundred and ninete rs old, He cast his first vote for Adams for vresident in 1796, whe nine s of having Maryland in 1767, He is twenty-one childr and Red Star Congh Cure relieved me of chronie cold.—Mr, L. P. Gibbs, Wilming ton, Del. changing wion der received a salary, which way, was only nominal, compared real income friend end of was, and his 158 s, write it out and give coper, who other Leen born the father mocrat in uf n Dr. Hamilton Warren, Ecle ic Physi- cian and Surgeon, Room 6, Crounse | few | An In an inte cially te nationa related never t is giv At the difficult of the ern tim ithe | ment, b tiguous | wlong avenue cabinet | preme § sons of the bull been ge T'he man v aliead of sen of h greeted Sherma rode ( arm. Gener army Tady stey botiquet was too dicr ne: it to Ho arm anc oflering The re Che and th ® pensar) N. Y. 15 0 tending of loses he gained, give a fc id ve i ling ocent; Vo to hell. also full in ' rish, i Id b poisoned is sbert sina’’ Norma Pacini’s | Jewess 1 and in commit: Renato devil to us cur St. Juco In buyin lots und Le: in value Two fu Moth Polack’s Bar refused who died instead « Propar Eeal o0 A ¥ MUSI liaks ras.c block corner 16th and Capitol avenue Dayaud night calls prowptly atiented to | il FOUIE] rmics Dominion a d day in question of flowers a: heroes take it, and into his mouth, placed's bougtiet that had been e . sex radieally cured, stamps fc American pily, even after 15 singul; L the tenor dies of poison. or he sees fit, Blvira following hi; is butehered in and in “Don ( beheaded, aliero”” th owing to these ho son i5 50 fond of 1. Editor enworth st & MceCandlish, 15 Invitations erect posts and along its road from Washington to N York, on the ground Id interfe persons to tr HOWARD'S BOUQUET. nt of the Gra Review of 1 Ita il Arn Franeisco ) those who were 1 capital at the clo; by an eye-witness 0 our knowledge 1 n herewith close of our blood ies, as will be grandest th | had served in'the Vir camp: he world-re befor th u ran ind This many was i a little more than a month assassination whole day to review erans of the war of Lincoln the re those who cts and the fovers ¢ and not two nerally stalo Aruy 1 the avenue on wnd G at Nead, so f nis st with enthus with as cads, 1 the' veterans h mounted ge > Whs ornzmente ting noand stafl, some 1 Howard, wit OTINE WS SO Sherman’s anims L been erccted in building, and filley in white, beavi which they of the At this point & hanc pped out to present to old Tecumsel, bu restive 1o ndmit of ar, in 2 sonorous enough to be heard many feet off, ¢ he latte ward., the crowd putti ying under h 1 g from the hands of might, for seve simply in seene was Associati —— Herviones. Musician: of the modern rey various the characters. course, and er. mind before Let us e ew ilus tri Linda he! nguinary W the leadi s de Po: blood. zoletto,” and in nfanticide, noxious CLAfr reta) in ; “Lies iovanni” the The Donizetti of horror. “Don n “Poliuto’ ts, in 1, in Jdgardd ano'’ two are “Borgia” in_ “Roby meets with the Doge is desy 'to sconds o 1o jumps off aroc s hoiled in Othellc mnvde Kills _the pay in * d suicide King, anc chutz Col iving M AL wna, S, imnatism in Cor: od of rl bs Oil. - Others Mak @ West-Side S0 can you, Mo Proper ] cortain and it would be wel 1 Dodge st i1l Jots nes duct, ene a corne buy your bo 1316 ' ain—Poppleton ave 33x100, good 7 room house, barn hennery and other improvements, A splendid clieap home only $2,200, 5. A. SLOMAN, 1512 Farnam st. ———— SRIRO0). ol 19th st, ono-half th, 50x132 with . $3,550, . SLOMAN, 1512 ¥ Ll permis; I'recently in New Y build a tcl n t vel Df 1 An ost to Grand Army men they mnd its neck, m far hands of patriotic ladies. There nine the subj tions—Verdi's ticide | patched, “P disgustingly ferocious. funeral nd National L incident - esp esent in our of the war, is and, having pu ¥ cmby M mopor v, 186 aftor the It took the maining vet il survived f the “Old days, as has Potomac has just the eneral me memor Sher- anee black itable excitement, passed ieral or stafl’ d by wreath le by the Behind distance ofY, I his single intense that al hegan to rstive, when the stand was reached front of the 1 with girls ng baskets flung ~ at victorious 1some young an elegant t his charger bis taking it, nd the old hero exclaimed to an old sol- loud shotted to ng his reins he surviving voice, ceepted the the ar of the multitude at this said to have been rent the ral minutes, wleseribable. Perhaps old Teeum or some of the heroes remember it yet. ses of cither 10 cents in s World's Dis- on, Buflalo, Misfortunes of Operatic Heroes and Very few ory end hap- Diilations at- s Mar- Linda ty is and 3 but r fel wbhing, es examy le. e buried Mantico is roasted, Lenora takes prus acid and Azu Cena'is doomed the N i In" “Tra- assinated i's e murder 1st’’ we by in- ble natter almost ever Huguenots,” one govs repertoire is ) stabs him- hiree people devoured by a_dozen are Anna Boleno the Queen Bevereux” me fate, in Bellini’s pyre, and Ralovy's hot oil on the stage. the Moor of course . In “Ballo” 1 there’s the » Perhaps, onel Muple artha,’’ ver.— the knee by ey and Sheridan Place ty on West 1 to advance ! tosec Bell rect at onc enth street via: school suits at near 26th, toinspect Ramge's goods, block south 0ol house, Must be sold on_account of foreclosure ‘arnam st, Forty yoars ago a Now Jersoy to Henry O'Reill io ue W sgraph by enabling ik City, cgraph li 55 by its means 1. | STRONGEST NATURALFRUIT @ POWDER GO ENGLAND COX C, Boston, ann Wil ¢ LAGLES 100 1 tructions in voca! and and rooi with F, with L0 ir., Fraukila 83, Wl g 219 S0 oy eA2Z LA ut L MOST PERFECT MADE VATORT OF o41); bosrl 1gDat $15L0 315 er, 15%. Por addrens, 8 Apollinaris “THE QUEEN OF TABLE WATERS® s R HIGHEST AWARD, FIVED TR ROYAL WARRANT HLR.M. THE PRINCE OF WALES. Apollinarss. “THE QUEEN OF TABLE WATER&” svstem of many ties and the no-drainage of our seoms and rural districts are pof- ces of potable water M.D. of APOLLINARLS best securd inst the dan- gers which a most of the ordinary dri Apollinaris “THE QUEEN OF TABLE WATERS" STy strects be bad, and defect- e drainage ar worse, but Sorthe promot, diseases of the diar« rhaeal lype there is no agent like the pol- luted water supply. A. Van der Veer, A, A, Van Der Veer, A.M M., M.D,, 2l Society of 19y 3, 1986 i Zhe dangerous qualitics of contam- inated drinking water are not obviated by the addition of svines or spirits.” Medical Officer of Privy Council, England, “Use nothing but Natural Mineral Waters, such as APOLLINARIS, free from all vigetable po Boston Journal. Apollinaris “THE QUEEN OF TABLE WATERS MAS RECEIVED THE HIGHEST AWARD LONDON, 188, AND 15 SUITLIED UNDER ROYAL WARRANT [0 HRH THE PRINCE OF WALES, ANNUAL SALE, 10 MILLIONS. Apollinares “THE QUEEN OF TABLE WATERSA “The dangerous qualitics of contam- inated drinking water are not obviated by the addition of wines or spirits.” Medical Officer of Privy Counci England. “The purily of APOLLINARIS offers the best security against the dan- gers which are common to most of the ordinary drinking waters.” London Medical Record. ANNUAL SALE, 10 MILLIONS, Apollinari “THE QUEEN OF TABLE WATERR” “APOLLINARIS reigns alone among natural dictetic Table Waters, 115 numerous competitors appear o have one after another died away,” British Medical Journal, “Its purity offers the best security against the dangers which are common to st of the ordinary drinking waters,' London Medical Record. Apollinares “THE QUEEN OF TABLE WATERS® A8 RECEIVED THE HIGHEST AWARD, LONDON, 1884, AXD 15 BUPPLIED UNDER ROYAL WARRANT 70 HRH THE PRINCE OF WALES, ANNUAE SALE, 10 MILLIONS, O all Grocers, Druggists & liin. Wat, Dealeras BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.' Apollinares “THE QUEEN OF TABLE WATERSY CAPOLLINARIS reigns alone among natural dictetic Table Waters, Its numerous competitors appear to have one after another died away." British Medical Journal, “Its purity offers the best securify against the dangers which are common to nivst of the ordinary drinking waters.” London Medical Record, Apollinaris “THE QUEEN OF TABLE WATERS® MAS RECEIVED Y118 HIGHEST AWARD, ROYAL WARRANT H.EH. THE DRINOT OF WALTS, ANNUAE SALE, 10 MILLIONS, Of all Grocers, Druggiils & Min. Wat. Dealiray BEWARE OF IMITATIONS,