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TAREN BACK T0 HER MAMMA, Capturo of an Eloping Twelve-Year- Old From Jersey. DISTINGUISHEO IRISH LEADERS' Secretary Sutton Talks About Arthur O'Connor and Sir Grattan Esmonde ~Colonel Price's Fire Extine guisher—Lincoln News. [¥ROM THE BEE'S LINCOLN BUREAU.] Deputy Sheriff Fowler was called upon Bunday night to go to the southern part of the county to get a twelveyear-old girl who had run away from her home in New Jersey with a man some twenty-five years her scnior. An officer from that state had come to take the girl back, and when the couple were found she cried little, but succumbed to the incvitable and in company with the officers left for the cast yesterday, the man being left behind and unmolested. The same runaway couple excited a good deal of atten- tion in Plattsmouth a month ago, leaving that place when New Jersey parties found their trail. There wus a large mecting of the Irish Na- tional league in Fitzgerald hall yesterday afternoon. The chair was filled by Hon. Johm Fiiz, uld. The committee intrusted with the druwing up of a programme of re- ecption to the Irish delegates made their re- port, which was unaninously adopted. Local societios will escortthe distinguished visitors with music o the opera house. A large num- ber of the most distinguished citizens have been invited to occupy seats on the platform, while the gallery and body of the hall, it is believed, will be crowded g At the t of Mr, “itzgerald, Secretar fave @ brief account of his trip east to reci the delegates on their arrival in America. He stated that he met the visitors as they descended from the deck of the Arizona and accompanicd them on their tour through Massachusetts, The reception in New York wasimmense. Cooper institute hail was »d with friends of the cause, including the gatlant Sixty-ninth regi- ment in uniform, and a large coutingent of the Ancient Order of Hiberniuns, Distin- guished Americans of every shade of relig- ion and political thought occupied the plat- form, among them the chairman, Charles A. Dunk, Judge NouhDavis, Governor Biggs, of Delaware, and Mayor Cleveland, of Je City. In Massachusetts tho ovations at Fail River, Holyoke, Boston, Lowcll und Worces- ter were jrepented tritmiphs. The strects were flluminated and densely packed with people, escorts were formed of various bodies, military companies, Hibernians, temperance cadets” and other socicties. . The great Boston theater was crowded from floor to dome. Governor Ames presided, and a large number of New England _celebrities wero noticed on the platform. Mayor Abbott pro- sided at Lowell and Senator Hoar at Wor- cester. In speaking of Sir Thomas Grattan Esmonde, the venerable Massachusetts stutosman said that when Benjamin Frank- 1in sought the sympathy of the Irish nation for the people of America, then on the eve of their great and happily successful struggle, he was welcomed on the floor of the Irish house of commons by Henry Grattan, and now it was right and just that the American people should give a hearty reception to tho Jouthtul desceudunt of the- great und noble Tenry Grattan, and return the compliment to the Irish people. Mayor O'Connor, of Holyoke, and Mayor Cummings, at Fall River, ulso proved themselves gentlemen of splondid encrgy and warm kindness, Mr. Sutton spoke in terms of high admiration of Hon. John J. Donovan and of the great hos- pitality of the Boston Irishmen, The speaker then gave u description of the delogate “Arthur O'Counor, M. P., for gal,” said he, “is a_tail, man, of some fort; st Done- powerfully built 0dd yeurs, with u serious face, which leuves tho unmistakable impres- sion’ that beneath its cold impussiveness there is a_deep fire of mastered energy. ©O'Connor is a slow, deliberate speaker. Ho knows of what he 'speaks, he means ever: word he utters, and without that qualit which generally passes for eloquence, h gradually interesis his hearers and forces them, a8 it wero, to give him their attention, When he has ceased ho has fully convinced his audience that the speuker is & man to_be relled on, au cnemy to be feared, @ sterling man o ' deopost thought and "hetivo _en: ergy. As a companion he is one of the most amiable of men, checrful, pleasant, with a fund of aneedote und of &' most unassuming Aisposition.” Sir Thomas Henry Grattan Esmonde, M. P. for South Dublin, and a baronct whose titlo dutes back to 1828 is a very young man of slight but firm build, and of medinm height. His clean shaved faco. has a hand- 80mo Cast and & very proposscssing expres- sion, with & striking resemblance to the por- trait of his great ancestor. Henry Grattan taken when he moved the “Declaration of Trish Rights.” Sir Thomas is & ready Bpeaker and hias a happy method of ingratiat- ing himself with his uudience, while he pos- sosses a fucility forneatly weaving incidental points into the web of his_discourse, and frequently makes his speech sparklo with genuine Irish wit. Ho' is thoughtful withal and very earnest. Judge Noah Davis and Senator Hoar expressad the beliof_that later in life Sir Thomas Grattan Esmonde will add another namo to the long list of eminent Irish statesmen. In private he isa happy and jovial young Irishman, most amiable in character ‘and very fond of a good cigar. Unlike many who visit _our shores, tho faithful baronet is charmed with America and Americans. _As an Irish patriot he is intensely national. Ho has in his veins on the maternal side the blood of Grattan, and is the great grandson of the gallant John Esmonde who gave his life for Irish frecdom in 1798, Thisisa distinction prouder than any title king or kaiser could confer. Such are the two distinguished men who will in a fow dnys be the guests of our city, to thauk the friends of Treland in the capltal of Ne- braska for their unswerving assistance to the cause of liberty, and to usk a_continuunce of that support uniil Ireland’s vight of tyranny shall give place to the dawn of a happier day.” A FIRE EXTINGUISHER FOR CARS. Colonel Thomas Price, the railroad con- tractor of Bennett, has tinished his contrac for the year and is getting ready to start fc Chicago to have his fire extinguisher put in operation. Two promiuent Chicago railroad men were hero last summer making a crit- ical examination of the invention and want- ing to get an interest in the machine. With this simple and cheap extinguisher placed in coaches there need be no fear of fire in case of a wreck. The invention was privately tested in this eity in the summerand to those who saw it there is no doubt but that it will do its work and in case of & wreck it will ex- tinguish & fire in & coach stove before a splinter would be broken from a car. Colonel Price is a practicai man and his faith in the invention is unbounded. He is confident that it is every way safer than steam heated cars and the risk of scalding passengers with cs- caping steam. STATE 1IOUSE ITEMS, Commissioner Scott has forwarded to the United States general land offico a statement showing that there is yet duce the state of Ne- braska 34,000 acres of land from the general vernment to supply the place of land taken lor reservations and “other government poscs. . This land, it graated by the gov ment, will become state school land and will be selected from government land yet unoccu- piced in the state, Nebraska has heretofore recovered 79,000 acres, and there is, it is claimed by Commissioner Scott, the above amount yet due. The board of public lands and buildings will meet to-day to take action upon putting an electric light plant in the Norfolk asylum. A number of electric light men are in the City to bid upon the plant. The following notaries were commissioned vesterday: William M. Foote, Superior; G. ‘V. Nichols, Indianola; John B. Cunningham, Lincoln; John H(‘Ill!a. Fairl I‘S; ¥ V. Kratky, Wahoo; A. O. Leslie, Champion; Augustus L. Young, Omaha; David L. Sprecher, Bartley. ‘Commissioner Joseph Scott is in Kansas City, where ho meets Mrg, Scott, who has been visiting in tho east. POLICE COURT. Judge Whitmore had a number of offenders Wulwdu . J. M. Downing, Fred Nolting and alter Purcell paid fines for drunkenness. Two vags were up for sentence, but proving their willingnoss to_work, were dischurged E. O, Boilun, alias E. O. Scaldin, bowed his head before a long list of charges: For fre- Quenting a house of ill famv he wus: taxed < THE OMAHA DAILY BEK: TUESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1887 #20; for assault and battery, $5, and for drunkenness, §3. - The total amount of fines against him with the costs amounted to 30 and he boards it out with the city. —— Cashmere Bonquet Perfume is unexcelled in exquisite combination of delicate odors. Colgate & Co. are the largest perfumers. e - INDIAN CIVILIZATION. Great Advancement Being tMade by the Coeur D'Alenes. Washington Letter: The most re- markable instance of Indian civil- ization i8 to be found away up in the Rocky mountains in Idaho among the Coeur D’Alenes. Their chief, Sel- tice, is now in Washington, and he has made a most pleasant impression on the president, Secretary Lamar, Indian Commissioner Atkins and all with whom .he has come in contact. Seltice is a firm-looking old man of medium height, heavy set and clothed in the ordinary garments of a white man. His face is kindly and intelligent. The old man came here to urge the president to allow a railroad to be run through his reservation. The Union Pacific and the Northern Pacific both want to run a “feeder” thrqugh the rich Coeur D’Alene country, but congress. last winter made no decision in the mat— ter and gave no right of way to any road. The Coeur 1’’Alene chief wants the president to letthe Northern Pacific build into his country this summer. “We are not many,” said the old man, through his i er, when I called on_ him. are perhaps four hundred Coeur D'Alenc families. We live like you white people on farms. Yes, we live better than many whi people. We are in beautiful mountains and valleys, and we hunt for the pleas- ure of hunting, but we have fine horses, and many cattle and large fields of grain. How much grain do we raise? In all 125 000 bushels, We cut it with harvest- ing machines, and young men work the machin They thrash out the gra in the cool fall on the ground with their colts. The freighters and the army and white people everywhere buy our grain, but we use much ourselves. We shall have much more if we can have a rail- ' road. Schools? Yes, we have good schools, which sisters teach, and our boys and girls can read and sew well. ‘We shall soon ask the great father not to pay usschool money. We can pay for our schools ourselves. They told me the railrond would spoil our land, that it was very beautiful, and man travelers in good clothes and much money would come and make our people trouble. They may come; they cannot hurt my Keuplo. My people have good heads and work hard, They will sell the travelers milk and bread and make them pay much money for coming to see our beautifil land. They tell me your Great Chief (General Sherman) will come to live near us; that he will build a fine house; that he says our lund is the most beautiful he has ever seen, and he has seen all lands under the sun. Well, he should come. The Coeur a’'Alene pople will be glad. They will give him fine horses and eateh fish for him. We shall not have a railroad this summer. We must drive eighty miles to the railroad for another year. We hope congress will give us arailrond next winter.” Seltice was urged powerfully by Chief Joseph, the Nez Perce, to join him in war against the United States. The old man listened respectfully to his friends, the Nez Perces, and then in a speech of burning eloquence advised Q.Il!'m to desist from their mad thirst for war, and told them he and his people would not fight the whites. The Nez Perces insisted he must join them, and he told them in the most decided man- ner that if they tarried an hour longer on their errand he would arrest them and turn them over to the white ‘When the outbreak came Seltice and his men_ protected the white settlers and their stock from the Nez Percos, and the whites got up a big peti ve the old chief suitably rew dent Arthur gave him a silver medal and President Cleveland gave him a similarone. el In another column of this issue will be found an entirely new and novel specimen of attractive advertising. It is one of the neatest ever placed in our |m‘n-r. and we think our readers will be well repuid for examining the supposod display letters in the advertisement of Pricklv Ash Bitters. s The Other Side of the Story. A disgusted traveler writes from Tos Angeles, Cal., to the Chicago Tribune: All they can boast of in this town is a boom built upon deception and withowt other foundation. Even theetimate is a fraud; everything is overrated It hasn’t rained for six months. The dust is six inches decp, and, when the wind blows, one can’t see half ablock. Trees that might be beautiful are an eyesore onaccountof thedust and sand. Nothing grows except under irrigation—not one sprig of grass or any other vegetation. All of Los Angeles would be a desert did they not irrigate. Expecting to find a land of milk and honey, you find sand and dust, intermingled with big, barren hills and mountains, and a_class of people who are five years behind the cust in everything. They ask from $25 to $45 a month for a small room in a private house, without board, gas, bath or any convenience whatever. In fact, there are no accommodations for strangers. Why people come here I bave yet to find out. The passion for room-renting and that for gambling in real estate are about equul, and we poor eastern “tender- foet” (so they call us) pay the penalty. They ask $35,000 for a house and lot that could be bought in Chicago for half the price. Nearly all the buildings are of rame—made from redwood. There is scarcely a brick building in the whole town. [ asked a real estate man why a single lot was considered worth $10,000. “Sell it while the boom lasts or you are gone,” was his cheerful reply. They gamble in land worse than Chicago does in wheat, and with more fatality. Town property is worth only what speculators make out of those who are not posted a8 to its real value. Chinamen are the chief producérs. The inhabitants are mainly Texans, Mexicans, Spaniards and Italians, with a few eastern people und some old Californians, who are hos- pitable and whole souled. The street cars are too small for any use; passen- gers on them have to get out to let other passengers on or off. They make about four trips in two hours, and the main street line is run by a man and a mule. Such is the thrift and prosperity of the world renowned health resort, Los Angeles. The climate and all its boasted_advantages are purely imagin- ary. There is nothing beautiful or health-giving in its surroundings. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. When she waa a Child, she cried for Castoria, When sho became Miss, she clung to Castoris, Whén shehad Children, she gave them Castoria. TWO B'ARS, THREE INJUNS, Make a Felonious and Ferocious As- sault Upon a Poor, Lone Man. HIS HAIR STANDS ON END. But Luck Saves Him, and He Lives to Tell a Very Thrilling Tale of the Frontler. Ihad been camped for a month in the Wind river mountains, Wyoming, says a western writer, before I gotan Indian alarm. I had come up from Fort Bridger with a pack mule and plenty of traps and provisions, and by traveling mostly at night and taking every pains to hide my trail, I had es- caped the attention of the redskins. Having gained the upper end of the valley, I found a safe spot for the mule and plenty of game for my traps. For the first two weeks I did not discharge my rifle once. 1 was trapping for fur, and what fresh meat I needed I killed with the bow and arrow. In twenty- five days I had a mule load of furs. I had but to set my traps and wait a lit- tle. It must have been years since any one had hunted or trapped in that vai- ley, for the hares would scarcely run away, and on three or four occasions black-tailed deer stopped at half pistol shot and gazed at me as if they had never seen a human being before. The discovery which so vexed and alarmed me was made early in the morning.” I had my camp close in the base of the mountains on the east side of the valley, while the mule was hid- den on the west side, about opposite. I had inclosed him in about half an acre of ground, on which there was a spring, by building up a light brush fence and by hobbling him, and it had been my custom to visit him at least every other day. My furs were stored in a cave forty rods above my camp as fast as ac- cumulated, and I had neglected no pre- caution which experience could sug- gest. Each morning it was my custom to climb to a ledge of rocks overhang- ing my camp and take a careful survey of the valley through a field glass whi I had carried for years. On this o sion I had scarcely turned the glass down the valley when I discovered three Indians, each mounted, and a ack horse following. They were not in war dress, but three bucks who had come into the valley on the same errand as myself, I was boiling mad oyver the advent of visitors. All my luck was gone ina moment, and Imight consider it a great stroke of fortune if I gotoff alive and left them my mule and furs. The fellows were ten miles away when I first sighted them, and I had a little time to reflect on my course. They would certainly come up the valley as high as my camp, and it was certain that I would have to move. The idea of giving up all I had gained and sneaking off empty handed was too m{mgnunt to' be acted on, and after I had spent ten minutes watching the trio I descended the ledge with a firm determination not to leave the val- ley. Ihad not yet lighted a fire to pre- pare my breakfast. I gathered up all the brands, covered the ashes with leaves and dirt, and worked for a quar- ter of an hour to obliterate all signs of the camp. My furs in the cave must take their chances. It was a well hid- den spot and the Indians might or might not discover it. My destination was a gulch or canon a mile farther up the valley, and my side of it. I ha twice passed the entrance, but had never explored the gulch. It doubtless contained some hiding place or point of advantage. and I would be forced toseek shelter until I knew what the Indians purposed doing. The redskins were coming up the val- ley at a slow pace, and I had entered the gulch half an hour before they were opposite my camp. Standing at the mouth of the gulch I could see them very plainly. From their move- ments I judged they had never been in the valley before, or at least not as high up. While they were not_looking for signs of white men, and had no suspi- cion of my presence, their hawk eyes soon made a discovery. They ran onto a footprint, an overturned stone or some other proof of the presence of w human being, and a moment later they swerved across the valley and entered the very thicket where my mule was concealed, I wasin for it now. The discovery of the mule would put them on to me, and the three hunters after game would become three warriors after my scalp, I instantly abandoned all hope of saving any of the property and started off up the gulch to make my escape through the range. It was a rough, dark place I had got into. In no place was the rift over ten feet wide, while it narrowed here and there to four or five. Its sides were al- mustfer}wndiculnr, and I had not gone over 800 feet before I came to an end, It was what is known as ‘‘a false canon,” extending only a little way into the mountain instead of cutting through it. In the twilight which prevailed down there I ran plump up against n mass of rock in my path, and when I'had burned a match or two I fully realized the situa- tion. Iwasina trap. It was not likely that the Indians yet knew of my loca- tion. They knew one or more white men were in the valley, but could not tell just where. It was morning, you remember, and before night camo they would know all about it. They would creep and dodge and reconnoiter, and before noon they would be certain that they had only one man to deal with. An{ attempt to leave by way of the valley would be checkmated, and I could not get out at the upper end with- out going over the wild and rugged mountains. I should, however, have re: turned to the mouth of the gulch to tr some other way, but while I was burn- ing a last match I heard a great clatter on the rocky bed of the rift a few yards off, Believing the Indians to be coming, I looked swiftly around for some place of concealment or advantage, and to my right I saw a hole in the rocks. In three i'umps T was at the spot, and ten seconds ater I had crawled into the hole on hands and knees. The minute I got my nose inside I smelt bear. Indeed, the odor was strong enough to stifle me. 1 knew also that I had entered a den or cave of considerable extent, and I hastily struck a match to look around me. It was a cave. While the entrance was narrow, the chamber was at least 8x12 in size, and high enough for me to stand up in. It uired only a few seconds to take have told you, and the match had just expired when I heard a sniff and a “*woof | at the entrance, and I not only smelt bear, but I heard him, He had his head in the hole, and I whirled my rifle about and fired right into his face., The roar he uttered shook the solid rock of the cavern, and he drew back, tumbled around in the gluch for two or three minutes, and then made off, whining with pain and wl- ing with angér as he went. hen I could hear him no more I lighted an- otlier match and looked for hair on the rocks. They were there in plenty, and THE NEW YORK AND OMAHA CLOTHING CO0. Are very busy this week unpacking new winter goods, and placing them before their custo- mers, who are confident of getting the best when purchased at THE NEW YORK AND OMAHA. They are having a great run on their NOBBY CHEVIOT SUITS AT $10 to $16.50. These suits have no equal either in style or price in this city. You can buy a good WORSTED OVERCOAT FOR $6.50, or an EXTRA FINE ONE FOR $15 to $25. As to UNDERWEAR, you can get a suit all the way from $1 to $3.50, and higher, including the very best importations. If your boy needs a hat 25¢ will buy one at the NEW YORK AND OMAHA, and 100 other styles ranging in price from 50c up to $5. they were proofs that it wasa cinna- [ is cold and soft, standing at about sixty mon bear whom I had turned out of | degrces both winter and summer, R house and home. There were a couple The low lands around San Jacinto of loose rocks on the floor of the den,and | produce six crops of alfalin cach year A 0 S OR the first move T mado was to roll them | without irrigation. Deciduous fruits, Al tables_of all kinds and cercals flourish and yieid large crops of fine quality. Sun Jacinto just now is jubilant over the prospects of having . railroad con- necting with the California Southern at Porris, eighteen miles distant, The subsidy of §55,000 is all subscribed and in hand, and inside_of six months the shrick of the railrond whistle will up and block the entrance. While the; did not fill the aperture, they create an obstruction which neither man nor bear could remove whilel was behind them. In about twenty minutes the bear re- turned, accompaiied by his mate, and for the next half hour they made lively work for me. They were fiercely de- termined to get at me, and as I did not OF THR Ghicagu, Milwaukee & St. Paul n,' Who is WEAK, NERVOUS. DERILITA. TED, who in his FOLLY and IGNORANCE has TRIFLED away his VIGOR of BODY, MINDand MAN 0, cau drains upon the FOUNTAINS HEADACHE, BACKACH Dreams, WEAK NENN of Memor He FU PIMBLES upon The Best Route from Omaha and Council Bluffs to THE EAST ESS in 80 é " 4 A 3 the FACE, and all the EFFECTS leading to wish to discharge my rifle again, | be heard in the valley of the San | nwo nparNs DALY BETWEERN OMAHA AND | EARLY BECAY and perhaps CONSUMP. for fear the _report would be jJacinto. COUNCIL BLUFES TION or INSANITY, should consult heard by the Indians, I had to resist the € EBRATED Dr. Cl ade N , T 9 cee ANDees 1851 _Dr. Clarke has "‘"ml‘" jfi,',': "'i\';"' '_““"r hc“flsuv;,“;? ,L‘a“; g:l(ll:s::i, M'llfi:!l;fl"!l, ]('Agl‘a:flm‘;fdc Do GENTYG o muzzle. Tho brutes_gave at las 3 1 asa bad job, but whilo the well ono TULL WEIGHT Rock Island, Frecport, ~ Rockford, Bndy, It makes NO Giference WHAT went away, the wounded one lay down PURE Clinton, Dubuque, Davenport, 28 suflering from discases pectie exactly in front of the entrance and : Elgin, Madison, Janesville, BT T R T R T licked his wounds and uttored low L Wiiiod;,. T Cioesé PG, D growls. He had put himself on guard, ’ "y A@-Send 4 cents postage for Celebrated And all other important points Kast, Northeast and Southenst. For through tickets call on the ticket ame Farnam stroet, in Paxton Hotel, or at Uni und he meant to stay by until he had had revenge. 1 had hastily gathered up o small quantity of provisions when THaft camp, and, though T had no water, I should not suffer much for a couple of ‘Works on Chronic, Nervous and Dells eate Diseases. Consultation, personally or by letter, free. Consult tho old Do ‘housands cured. t- 1iman Sloepers and the finest Dining Cars in the world are run o the main line of U w0, Mil- C© ‘emnle, o A o 1 Haliway, and ever days. The only thing I could do was to T o Sy SouAeous ol (ampa), Heforo confiding y make myself as comfortable as possible compeny, u’&’\‘fi‘mflfi A (r:leml lelkrrdor‘t;’ill may and wait for something to turn up. I ; e, | Sie s eerogand s s a0d years to life. (Sec re rorn,” tlc. (stamps). Medicine and writings kent everywhere, secure from exposure. Hours, 8t0 8; Bundays, 9 to 12, Address, . D. O] . D. 186 So. Clark 8., GHICAGO, ILL. cared very little about the bears, know- ing I could kill them off atany time, but the Indians were to be seriously considered. They would leave no stone unturned to find my hiding place, and once they found me, gituated as 1 then was, T was a dead man. Thero was no change in the situation until about sundown, when the other bear returned, and a sccond attempt was made to got atme. They were so determined that I had to use my re- volver, firing four shots, and, while neither of them was killed, both were driven to fury by the wounds. The one went off as before, while the other lay down at the mouth of the den, and the night passed without disturbance. I glopt pretty well forn man_in a bear’s den, but awoke just as daylight was fil- tering down into the gulch. Tt was a fierce roar from the bear which aroused me. Ithought that his mate had re- turned and that another attempt was to bo made on my defenses,but T was quick- 1y set right. ~ The bear started down the gulch, and inside A minute T heard shots and shouts. Then the roars of a second bear were heard, and for five minutes there was a terrible commotion a hundred feet below me. T could seo dark shadows struggling together, and T knew the shouts came from In 18, but I was not clear in the matter until the day grew stronger and the fight was S. S, FELKER, OMAHA, NEB. 106 N. 13th Stroeet. Ask your retailer for the ‘ JAMES MEANS : $4 SHOE or the JAMES MEANS $3 SHOE, according to your needs. CAUTION ! Positively none genulne unless our vameand prico appear plinly on the soles. " Some deaters, in order tom, Tts superlor_excellence proven in millions ot homes for more than a quarter of a century. It i used by the Unitod States Government. FEn- dorsed by the lieads of the great universities, as tho Strongest, Purest and Most Heathful, Dr. Price's the only Baking Powder that does Rot contain Ammonia, Limo or Alum. Sold only n cans, PRICE BAKING POWDER CQ., New York. Chicago, S, . Louls. PURE CALIFORNIA WINES, shipped direct e from our vineyard. Riesling, Gutedel Clarets, < Eort, Snerries, eto, San Jous Vauts, Sevontly LEighth, S8an Salvador and am streets, San ‘Tho best and surest Remedy for Care of | Jose, CAlifornin. all diseases caused by any derangement of the Liver, Kidneys, Stomach aud Bowels. e suna] | UAUS FI&E POWDER Ask for the Tames Means $2 8lhoe for Boys n e tailed ab $70r83. JAMES MEANS 83 SHOE I the orl nal 83 Shoe and absolutely the only shoe of ita price y on the marks fore mere outwal h 4 by the best retailers ted States, and we will yield readily to the beneficent influence of hoes are sold over. Then I made out a heap of dead. ) » Yeach In any pats ox toreoky 1508 It wasa good hour before I pulled L) L valuing their comploxion should securea rd,meblonng his BavEr away the rocks and erawled out. T had | ‘BAMPLE. BOX' (ORATIS) R Ry figured that the Indians had trailed me ‘ ot the latentimported aud unsaimously sckzowte | |, Fill e of the sbovi Shocs for sule i QuAtta FACE POWDER. up the gulch and had been attacked by the bears,and I was right. I simply waited to be sure that all we d When T finally erept cautiously dow the heap I found the two bears and three Indians in a pile,and each and all were growing cold in death. The bears had been shot and stabbed again and again, but the redskins were a sight to s¢ The flesh had literally been stripped off their bones, and one of them, whose body I pulled out for the purpose of examination, seemed to have 612 North 16th street; Hayward Bros., 407 South th streot. In CouNciL BLUFFS by ‘Sargent & Evans, 412 Broadway, RUCE & CO. K J. : L{0YD & 6O CHICAG) Solo Imj "'":“m ST.LOUIS LAW SCHOOL W DEPARTMENT O WASHINCTON UNIVERSITY ROOFING. G.W.ROGERS | Composition and Gravel Roofing. Agent for Warren's Natural Asphalt Roofing. Medwl Brand 2wnd # ply Ready Rooflng. 1205 Muson LSH Apahi ‘Street, Omaha, Neb, evory bone crushed, while his neck was Tho Twenty-first year of this well known school will R hrslian 1t s pleasant to the taste, tones up the begin ut 4 0'clook p.m. on WEDNESDAY, OCT. 13(h, 1, - ExAMINATION for advencud standing My mule had not been_ disturbed, nor system, restores and preserves health. 10th, #a.m., Entire courss may be com| threo yearsat option of student. Diplom: Tuition $80 per unnum For Oatalogus: Doan of Facilly: FTLCRs Piaser 522 DRS, §. & D. DAVIESON, 1767 Olive Street, St. Louls, Mo, Of the Missouri State Museum of Anatomy, St. Louts, Mo., University College Hospital, Lon- don, Glesen, Germany and New York. Having devoted their attention SPRCIALLY 10 THE TREATHENYOF Nervous, Chronic and Blood DISEASES. Move especlally those arising from impru- dence, invite allso sulering to cdrrespond with- out delay. Diseases of infection und contagion cured safely aud speedily without use of danc had” they found my cache of furs. It took the day to pack up, and get ready for a_long journey, and when night came[ headed for the fort. I got through without even sighting a redskin, and I had with me, as_every man at the fort in 1867 can testify, the four Indian horses and two Indian rifles in addition to my own own outfit. et o LN One Fac Is worth a column of rhetorie, said an American statesman. Tt is a fact, es- tablished by the testimony of thousands of people, that Hood’s Sarsaparilla does cure scrofula, salt rheum, and other dis- cases and affections ng from impure state or low condition of the blood. Tt also overcomes that tired feel- ing. creates a good appetite, and gives strength to every part of the system. Try it. TYLER DESK CO FOR PLANTING TIMBER CLAINS, Black Walnuts, hulls on, £. 0. b. 60c per bu Black Walnuts, hulls off, #1.25 per bu Box-older S 10¢ per 1b Ash Seed, 10c per Ib Honey Locust Seed, 25 por 1 Russian Mulberry Seod, . 850 per Ip Catalpa Seed, » 1.0 per 1b Also all kinds of Fruit and Forest Troes for sale. Address, Shenandoah Nursery, D 8. LAKE, Proprietor, SHENANDOAH, 1A, The Theatrical Profession. Merit will win and recetve publio recognition and pratse, Faots, which are the outcomo of gencral ex- perence, growing through years of eritical and practieal test, become a8 rooted and fmmovable as the rock of Gibraltar in public opiulon, and honeo- forth need no further guaraniwe asto their gonu ineness. Tho indisputable fact that Swift's Spocide 1 thie Lest Liood purier u the world, 1s oneof these immovable Gibraltar rock facts of Which wo have #poken, and every day's experience rools this con- viction' decper aid decper L public opinion. ® Every class ‘of our” peoplo n “America auid fn Ruro ———— Progress at San Jacinto. San Francisco Chronicle: The valley ] 4 every trade, cailug and profession, tncluding @i | gerous drugs. Patlents whose cases have been of the San Jacinto, which three years | medical prof ve horno voluntary Seatt | ted, badly treated or pronounced incur- mouy 10 the re virtues of 8. B.°S. ‘and ago was a vast plain, almost entively surrounded by mountains, whose highest peaks reached an altitude of 14,000 feet above sea level, and which were inac- cessible except by private conveyance, has made vast strides since the year 1884. It was but little known then by the general public, and even those who were acquainted with it in those days never dreamed of its capabilities, or that it would ever bécome what it is to- day, one of the most enterprising and able, should not fail to write us concerning their symptoms. tion. o its tnfalliblo eMicacy Iu curlig all discases of the blood. ‘Theso testinoulals aroon file by the thou. sands, and open o the inspection of all. Now co uasolicited, two distinguished members of the th rical professlon, who gratefully testify to the won ful curativo qualities of the Specio fn thelr ind Vvidual cases. Their nials &70 herowith sub- mitted to the publie without further comment-—let them speak for themselves, The lady 13 a member of Thaila Theatro Company, of New Yok, aud formerly of the Residenco Theairo, Berlin, Ger: Inany, and of MeVicker's Stock Company, of Chicago. The gentleman is & well known member of the New York Thalla Theatre Company. Both are well known 1 theatrical clrcles iu this country and in Kurope. Charlotto Randow’s Testimony. NEw Yomk, May 3, 1887 All letters receive inmediate utten- JUST PUBLISHED, And will be mailed FREE to_any address on re- geipt of one Tcont stamp. on “Practical Observa- on Nervous Debility and Physical Exhaus- to which is added an "Eul‘y‘ on Mar. with important chapters on diseases of productive Organs, the whole forming a valuable medical treatise’ which should be read Ly all young men. Address DRS. $. & D. DAVIESON, Proprietor Omaha Business College, IN WHICH 18 TAUGHT Book - Keeping, Penmanship, Commercial Law, Shorthand, Telegraphing and Typewriting. A S Bwift Bpecific Company, Atlanta, Ga. : 1707 Olive St., St. Louls, Mo, 8end for College Journals ro-ahead colonies of southern Cali- - 4 i q faong ertptions wuarougiutes of the o1 ot T 8. E. Cor. 10th and Cavital Ave. . i > The town of San Jacinto has about 600 | - feaiing brearetion of samaparlis abd s1pes Lason o Lned remedies to no effect. inhabitants and more are coming in every day, and new buildings are goin up on every hand. They have a $12,00( schoolhouse, with an attendance of about 200 pupils, There are three ho- tels, two of brick and one of frame. Land in San Jacinto and adjacent thereto is selling all the way from $40 to 81,000 per acre, according to location; town residence lots from $200 to $1,000 per lot; business property from 330 to 150 per foot. The San Jacinto Land and Water company have over 7,000 feet of mains laid, and there are over 100 flowing ar- tesian wells. The largest well dis- charges 1,500,000 gallons every tweunty- four hours. About 250 feet is the aver- age depth of these wells and the water WAL M'INTOSH. B. ¥, BODWELS BODWELL & MCINTOSH, Real Estate Dealers, 140 Bouth Spring Street, Los Angeles, - - - GCalifornia, Dealers in city and country property of all des scriptions, General information to new-come ‘ers freelv given. J. B. HAYNES, packages, by a trouble and restoring BBty Sve o Tl oot meniad tor b veyou imontal tor 56 aud publictly‘aa you wizh to mako otit, 11 14 A RLOTTE RaNDOW, 152 Bowery, near Caual Stroot, . ba it erl's Teatimony, The Bwitt Bpecific Company, Atlauta. Ga. : Gentlemen—For two years I had . T Ubed (a7 S081%, SUIDILF 80810, Nd ¥ o fo other remodies, and was preseribed (or'by numbers of physicians, but found’ no relief. At last | deter: Boiiee Kave thoroughty' retiovel mp, ‘ant s au Ans r 9 thoroushly relioved e, a . use this versticate i iy -..-unmé?. wian, ' %48 Voo Hasaxis, Mowber of Thalia Thos New York, May 3, 1857, el =—OFFICIA L—— STENOGRAPHER, Third Judicial District, 3 CHAMBER OF COMME L Youthiul, apr Tfl.,“..'!.',f"’..‘r’.‘.?u.mm.aml«o Treatise an Dleod and Skin Diseases malled fres. Tus Swurr Sreawic Co., Drawer 3, Atlairta. G {fouh erron and bisd practices CURED. GOLDZN BEAL €0, 19 Looust it 5t. 1ou