Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 30, 1887, Page 9

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| el THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE SI\l‘l‘ ENTH \l*AR O\IAHA SI:NI)AY MORNING, J \A\I ARY 30, 1:%877.‘--“1\” EN PAGES. « HANMOND PLAGE, SOUTH 0M|AHA PARK RN wSAND WECEIN W Ve« LIS THEQ. OLSEN, AND JAMES VORE, - 218 SOUTH FIFTEENTH STREET, :ao~ HAMMOND PIL.ACE. Is 3-4 blo from Fowler's and Lipton's Packing Houses. South Omaha Park is near enoungh to the Pa ing houses to make fine residence property, and it is building up fast. CEMETERY paRs =2 HAMMOND PLACE CcO 30 o z m - o < 2] =i i O ey 3 11 18 [ mm 6 What is the use of going a mile or two when EXCHANGE Yyou can buy fine property and make a safe invesi- ment in inside property for very little less. Hammond Place is bound to be a business prop- erty. There is nothing finer than South Omaha Park. $£300 and upward buysa lot. 14 ar, m Iu m l m i u|ul44'ui —i=tele =izl l Ravines and hollows are dear at any price, This property all lays fine. A magnificent view from all this properi it overlooksthe whole of South Omaha and vie /e Diere is o doubt but that South Oinaha will be ity 25,000 inhabitants in 2 years, but if 1d be a set-back INSIDE property is al- worth the mon: y. It wili increase in value faster than wild cat property and it is « safe in- vestment. Of cowrse nobody can buy solid proper=- SOUTH OMAHA PARK. ST, 5 3 CIBSON S S i ty by paying ten per cent down like they can on i wild cat property. e H i i ! H i I ! l ] i ~ ~ (EwERyY ‘ v RUSH & SELBY'S ADDITION, ! ALBRIGHT'S ANNEX. 0[ BL\](N A\D "l\ DU(, y & running stream, forming here and | out Snot, nor did Spot ever tak 5 Spot. His | was perfeetly broken, | ups were not conducted as carefully as »vent to peals of laughter atlbert, receiving severe wounds at thy J there deen pools, o whose bosom float | tutional Withont the colon 1s | and with his p lm- brandi ons | they are now; therefore the colonel had miniseences of his own roguery. | battle of Novarro. He worked his pag the g ,imu« flower and leaf of the water | there grester a betw ready for service. | plenty of opportunities for branding the colonel gave himself a brief | sage to this country as a cabin ho 11i. lily.” T'his prospect seemed especially at- | man than between the colonel and sighted 2 band of | mallet-heads, and also for stealing caly respite he entered into horse raising in | Lz fortune is the fruit of his in <qu1 A Cattlo Ranch Romauce of the Pacific | tractive to Colonel Thomas Benton, ‘who | and conscquently uzly rumors b s Spot wonld dart forward and pin | and corraling them in some secluded | Siskiyou county, but his ventures were [energy and thrift. He Livished money Coast claims for lnmself the proud distinction | eirculate that neither the colonel nor | a calf to the ground by the e Spot | mountain spot il the weaning scason | not attended with much success, for an [upon the education of his duugiiters and of being the son of the chief statesman | Spot were guite as honest as all good | rarely mude the mnstake of ching a | was over. Colonel Benton's natu unsympathizing public had him arrested | was a most kind and indulgent futher, that Missouri has produced and also of | steckmen should be, branded calf, “Hold him thar, good | always obliging. Wheneyer he m for horse stealing. After he got out of | When Victorin was to sing for the firsg A VERY USEFUL CANINE, | being a brevet colonel in the southern WATCHING THE COLONEL. dog!”™ would the colonel exclaim, de- | man on the range he invariably told m-n this scrapethe colonel followed the oc- | time at o chy arity concert, she said shq army during the late trouble, when he However, botn held their counsel, and | lighted with the sagaciousness of his'dog, | of the whercabouts of some cow of his | cupation of a teg cr, and is well knowin | must have a dress just like onc thaf S arrived there some elev, o years ago At though their moyements were matters of while he leisurely dismounted and heated | brand having an unmarked calf, while in | in northern California. Spot's carcer has | Patti had worn. It was givén her ata A Modoc County Stockman Wbo | the head of sixty cattle and established | suspicious jealousy, no rough hint or | his brand at a gap-brush lire, After the | all |m~~|ml|l\ Colonel Benton was indus- | been a tritle more dignified than that of | cost of $1,100. Then she must have dig= Branded all the Mavericks himself with the intention of entering | eavesdroppings disturbed the serenity of | branding was” completed away would | triously driving the calf to his sceret | s late muster, for when the colonel sold | monds like Pattr's. Mr. Morosini bought P into the stock business the “,h,ms whose lands still maintaiued | Spot bound “after another ealf, and | corral with his own brand upon it ont of the cattle business he presented | §60,000 worth to deck out bis daughtcr's in Sight—Patent Way AMAN OF KESOURCES their rapidincrease, whose good nature | thus ere night the eolonel would be fif RETIRING FROM BUSINESS his valuable dow to John Schallock, who, | vanity. of Cattle-Growing. Colonel Benton was a man of resourees | kept pace with his prosverity, and whose | teen head the richer. Spot was aterrible | Finally. after two years of unparalleled | 102, Was ¢ mallet-head huntor, and who | =y trusted implicitly in the honor of . and fertile in expedient, and though | hospitality kept abreast of both sver- | dog, possessed of as much pluck and dar- | success in this business, Colonel Benton | 1 turn gave him to a man called Forbes, |y ehildren, and when Vietorin went off without means himself, he possessed the | theless calves were always bellowing on | Ing us his master, and no bull or cow | determined on retirimg. from the ranks | W0 runs the Linkyille saloon, and o | wit the cosehman the blow fairly stags San Francisco Chromcle: Among the | confidence of moneyed people, and was | his seeret corrals, sturdy steers bearing | OF steer walked that ever succeeded in | of the stock-r andt, much to tho de. | BOW in his old 0 Spot -n;n-‘ pon the | yered him, He has never communicated many lovely spots which adorn Modoe | backed in his enterprise by a widow and [ his brand were continually found upou | escaping him. Ouce on i 5 light of everybody owning eattle in his [ §ihs of the saloon, ;"”""J‘ I master | yith her since. “She has chosen her Sk O ,’ _( the least bautiful a wan callod lh)u; tt in Siskiyou county, | the'mountan, meek milk cows not of attucked a four-year old ity,he made his final round-up, when during the day xvu‘HH e onslaughts of the | G\ eonr ' he excluimed. I will not oounty, Cal,, hot tho jeast boaulihwi is | (vy) ave him this sixty head on | inally in his band of sixty also « turning on him, sent its horns through Tearned thut his increase from u | Pummens who aflect tho town, it | aven sanction a divorce. No, she i8 noy that known as Fairchild's Springs, or the 1 shares, Notwithstanding thé fact t his brand. Still no or ised the col- [ the dog’s shoulder and pinioned Spot to T O ity head in two. yours | Right ho keeps watch and ward over the | iy “this country. | sond her @ certain Nigger Cabin. Nor is the history attach- | Coloncl Benton's manners were urvane | onel of direct dishonesty, yet it was de- | the ground. On the steer withdgawing | wimounted 10 100 hosd of cows Fomisos, and is now us groat bpertor b | sum of money w live on. Her:conduct g to the site without a certain peculiar | and that b spitality was of the, most m-mm.d that ( 2l Bunton, notwith. | its horn Spot again attacked the steer | of two-year-old stecrs, 200 hiifer blis burglare af ”f“'m \ he was 10 the | presses hoavily upou e, Go where interest to the stockmen of the surround. | Unbounded order, the colonel was and held him down while Colouel Ben- | 850 yearlings: The tacetions my x‘.uf Ihlv ads W I‘xll-‘:“w“‘:t d upon the M”\I. w, do what I may. I am known as old ing country, who, though often insensible | "10% \\ul\ nsiderable suspi & ,.lu be watched, ::‘3 .lrmmluuull_) put his brand on his | mude by Colonel Benton are yet :;n “:‘.w“n: “.’u‘dlhl.w “‘m].‘ i the: counties | Morosini, the father of Victorin. My own 10 the nutural beautics of . Jocat mingled with jealousy, brother »whoys rode up to the N ide remembtred by the old settlers L i honorable eareer weighs as nothing ation, stockmen, on i ot s budien ao: | LAGla with eycs wide open and hand on A DOG OF RESOURCES 800 that thar spotted st o T aeninst the soolnl verdict, I take & DOE keenly sensible to the advantages to be | g it of wealth and exstraor pistol, deterimtned to enter into ¢splana Spot was a dog that brooked neither 3 when his cattl s “Pattler” in New York Star: 1 had a | a6 the opers. Lask my friends to come, derived from a cold rivulet, whose wate, calaity w ‘“ whioh his ca i tions with the colonel, but were met by | insult nor it erfCrenc There was nota | driven, “Me and Spawt took that from with Oid M | The men do; they leave their wives at keep green the adjacent pastures. The it { the attuble stockman with the cheeriest | man who dared toueh him, and even the | Massa Carr. Massa Carr is the best | day. @ will not identify ¢ home. Whyt Because s waters of the spring are as clear as erys o “How do. Slip off your horses, genl'men. | colonel, whose ascendancy’ over the dog | catticman in this here uppar country. | of Victoria Schillin 15| Who were in Mo S S A T S A 4o (t FANIGLY ‘-m‘}-' sce you. Plenty of hay, boss. | was complete, never atteimpted to scold | Massa Carr's stock miike zood beef the burden of his pi 1| marked man, misrepr ented, |mv~1||«l;, TLNBUAL Sl aim o e ARG ut a ui Mibie .' Cut off i slice of that thar beef, illed a hput S Hml.mu ) ¢ for a wallet sce that thar red cow; well sal, I took | that 1' is & much u [ and ridiculed, and all for no fuult of my Pl illows noar by, iich a small swman the colan eali this moining, genl'men, Step in, | head (which means a lirge-sized ealf | that thar cow from Massa Carr. Mussa | of a )straci 5| wWn stockade house in a dilujp oudi ]’*‘ tor. His knowledge step in! and the fearful foeé was con- | without a brand which has Deen weaned) | Carr is proud of his Devon stodk. His | itis er He tald b 1 A suid, I cannot describe the tion, whic kuown th igger | intinite “':! h b QDAY POW R verted into a gratefal guest and there was not a mallet-head within | Devon brand, sah,is the finestin the land. | with nd p t 1| path e of this old gentlemun’s aps Cabin,” From this eabin is obtained a | JWhite bulldog, who wa MASTEL AND DOG AT WORK sixty miles of headauarters whieh Spot | That thar bull-faced cow 1 took from | canno i unsiayory notoriety. I view of as pretty a strotch of meadow fuwiliar name of bpot Tl colunel was rarvely out of the sad- | or the colonel did not know. Before the | Jack Day Juck Davis is a good mun an ar Iy to blumeé fop Feie A ted Gl % | oo el were inseparasle pani dle. Well mounted and well cqupped, | settiers. became thick the cattle were | He swars frighttally. | s I th patriot of idle tonguck, K Y in the United States, watered | and the colonel never made a ride with | he was always on the range, followed by | numerous i the mouutaius sud round- | took fromw Jo raseal ©owas u gadlint soldier under: Char twralone o

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