Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
“ THE WOMEN OF THE PERIOD. The Labor and Patience Necessary For Her Proper Make-Up. AN OLD CUSTOM UNOBSERVED. New Years Calls a Thing of the Past— Bome New Fads—A Novel Sance— A Pretty Contest—C) Belle's Letter, NEwW YORK. Dec. 30.—Correspond- ence of the BEE.}J—It has heen ob- served that several ladies of the exquisite class carry their hands out- stretched, as if bestowing a benediction on the empty air. The secret is out. A notion prevails that this attitude will keep the hands youthful in appearance by preventing wrinkles. Therefore, the fashionable hand is worn much of the time extended, palms down. It is 10 be feared that benevolence is not on the increuse. The position does not admit of the hands holding much. But just think of that everpresentsolic- itude that livesin the female soul, en- abling women to go around hour after hour with their hands in a straight-out, open condition. , At night a preposter- ous invention must be worn: Maria enme to spend the day with me. She got through it, paddling about with her flappers stiff as pokers, actually be rudging the necessity of wrinkling fiu‘ fingers in order to grasp her knife and fork; but in the evening it came on to rain, and she was forced to stop. Then, indeed, she was i ble, careful at our hou hand extend v, she sent for her \\ hat do_vyou think Mittens made of wash ther, the innerside fortified with s strips of steel, t kept the hands el and outstretehed: and these les were tied at the wrist with pink ribbons. Maria began to go to bed at 10:30, and really reached the sheets at 12 sh A Her hair was taken down, brushed done up to wave at the sides and cu the top. Her face went through a won- For twe nty P rubbed upward by the tips of the fingers under the eyes. Then the mouth wis held open in'the shape of an exclamatory O, while the cbeeks at the were rubbed from 5 townrs A tremen- 't wis made with the treacher- jast under the chin, that will [ t drawn lines with the coming on of years. For twenty good minutes Maria d her guilet. Then she brushed y. She wet a lock of s and put in her mouth at the base of her hind window teeth 'n the check and the teeth, Thiy is 4%o-called wonder for preventing any wither on the part of the ch All this time a decoction had been s ing in a small silver plated vessel the gns.Thix cooking utensil hi over in Maria’s bag of toilet tri hot and resinous smelling poultic /the result. Maria daubed her fa thickly with n and applied a flannel- finen mask at Scott! She looked like the vei rophet in that mask and her night dress. Outside her whole paraphernalia she laced an_odd sawed- off sort of corsot. It was just a very wide belt, flaving at “)5‘ and bottom, but it lashed up her victuals and vitals like a relentless vice. Then came the hard- soled mittens with their Spanish insteps. Into their grease-smeared interiors J\c plunged her hands and got me to tie them around her wrist. “What if you want to scrateh your ear in the night,"” said I, “Don’t suggest it,” she replied. “T bore o mark for a week when I must have dug that centre steel intomy eye.’ Then she went to bed. 1 took a look at her an hour after. Those wash leather mittens were stifly crossed on her breast. Her flannel swathed face was upturned in the dim light. She was for all the world like the efligy in stone that lies in West- minster Abbey over the sarcophagus of Anne Bolleyn. The hammers of the relic hunter have carried away much of Anne's ngse and several of the fingers. The mask and mittens had the same eneral effect. It was reassuring to see er turn up at the breakfast table after her martyrdom a general flavor of mild decay pervading her person, but yet a living friend. Some night Marid will surely swallow her cotton quid,and th good-bye, dear! She will never survi that accident. But just notice the dow- agers and their daddles. As George Thatcher says in his son “She carried her hands jusl 80, And the villain still p\usuml her.” While the reader is perusing this letter the swell dandies of New York will not be making New Year’s calls, as might be supposed, but are leaving that old Kuickerbocker custom to the very common fellows. That manner of ugenmng the holiday has gone clear out of fashion. Neither on Sunday, nor on the enbuiufi legal New Year's, will a single Fifth avenue residence be open to callers. A fow will have little baskets attached to the bell handles, for the reception of cards, but even that recognition of a once-honored usage will not generally be made. The trouble with N Year's calls is that anybody and everybody can make them, 5o much asa hansom cab isnot essential, and if the maker of calls is too poor to ride in street cars he may plod around afoot. The intention of the top 10,000 isto do things thatare impossible to the rabble. Therefore they have abolished New Year's calls, and instead spend the day out of town, as a rule. Murray Hill will be depopulated, and its people will be scattered among the country seats of the familics, purties are made up for these excursions, the departure to be made on Saturday and the return on Tuesday. Tobogganing, if weather and snow permit, and dancing anyhow, will be pursued where no intrusions by the common people shall molest or muke afraid. The most regarded bride in the wide world, 1 think, has this week been the new wife of Hol'l‘y Wall, the king of the dudes. The pair have been to theaters nightly, they dine and sup at Del- monico’s, and they kee prott{ gen- erally in public view. Mrs, Wall is not beautiful, but she has a delicate, re- fined face, u good, tall figure,and a ve! distinguished air, The strange fact about her is that her wilets show none of the accuracy and eare which are seen in the niipm‘vl of her celebrated hus- band. Her gowus have a stylish cut, and are evidently made by some clever wmaker; sho weirs them with some of the picturesqueness of an actress; but there is a slouchiness in them than that one might suppose would grieve her spick-and-span spouse. could search the visible bries on Berry with a magnifying glass without discovering a blemish. ut as 1 sat behind his bride I saw her gloves were soiled, her bonnet was of unseasonable straw, her collar was Eluncd awry, one button at the back of er dress was missing, and altogether she lacked that serupulous nicety of de- il which, seemingly, the king of @udes would exactin his wife, Iwasin company with & man the OV dcome other evening who couldn’t have told if the girl of his absorbing interest wore gauze or three-ply carpeting, He was the venernble {\lflu-l- Colby, editor of the Banner of Light, the Boston spirit- ualistic journai, and he had come on a visit to New York to witness some new marvel in spooks. On this occasion he was at a s given by Mrs, Stoddard Gray, at s<t Thirty-fourth street. Her' ex ions are transparent enongh to an unbeleiver, but BrotherColby has faith unlimited, and the medium made a special effort to s his longing for marvels, A shadowy form came out of the cabinet and announced herself as his decensed gister, and he vowed that he recognized her; another was hig half- i . and he declared that he knew s instantly: a third was pronounced by him the materialized spirit of a woman whose portrait adorned his sanc- tum; and so on until the particular demonstration of the evening was reached. That was a novelty, I think, From the cabinet into the dim light of the long parlor emerged the figure of what seemed to be a man garbed in black. He shook hands with several of the u'u suid that his name was Dr. Bake e glided slowly off toward the darker end o’i the apartment and ap- peared to settle down into the floor. nstantly there arose in his placea feminine spiritin white robes, with her draped avms waving and her fect as light as a ballet dancer’s. Sheswooped like a veritable apparition upon us, whispered mysteriously, made my blood curdle for nminute, and then retreated into the cabinet. I'ree masons are jubilantover the fact flml, n their recent great fair, in this any in the guild con- udices of their wives ry, and got those to 20 and assist there who had vowed them- s i of an institution ver mastered, and a power ov tain nights g Huence. Now between the fair sex and its protectors, and this seems not likely to terminate, as that of the masculine victory. merely a phase of the old The women are banded te her against a rumseller. Iis name Hil- nd he is a type of that large class of rmans who began life here by keeping thé corner groceries, and who, when the law forbade little black bars behind stores, abandoned the trade in necessavies almost in a body and becamo the founders of the then new order of showy bar rooms. Hillen is the nabob of them all, His chiel place is in August Belmont's old fumily mansion in Fifth avenue. No . - did the great banker move than Hillen got the property, and outraged gilt-edged society converting the first floor intoa_palace of drink. The lishment did a great bu, rmm the start. That is the principal artist's nl the hl\vn. One who cares to the ar- s or e .\lnl to en n|||'l|t~ for themselves. Willi; M. Chase, the exquisite of the profes sion, and the man who made a mint of money b t sale and exhibition of hi netioned the choice of Hillen sts retroat by tak- ing a few fr e from some of the frequent gatherings in the grand mu- seum that constitutes his studio. Well, Hillen comtemplated a still bolder move than thatof planting a bar- room on the very spinal column of swell existenco. He determined to establish another drinking house at the corner of University Place, a block west of Broad- wiy. Now Fourteenth street from Broadway to Sixth avenue is sacred to the ladies and their shops. T build- ing is a retail store, and the sidewalks from dawn till after dark are crowded by women and girls, not of this city alone. but from every place on the con- tinent. The word sacred applies }M'\lli:n'\y to this stretch of four blocks, or no man has e had the hardihood to attempt to uti a store or even a sidewalk booth for any masculine inter- est, and not a drink of liquor was ever offered for sale there since the street was captured by the fair sex. Excite- ment followed the news that Hillen in- tended to start a bar-room in this Adam- less Eden. This was what he had aimed at, and he spent 340,000 in decorating and furnishing the not very large room. "The floorihg is acrazy work of imported mosaics, the bar is unequaled in cost and beauty, and the back bar, with its great arches and alcoves, each backed by enormous shects of mirror and framed by the most delicate carving, is beyond anything in the city, so far as magnificence is con ned. Bronzes, stained glass, polished brass, bric-a- brac and curios are fairly heaped in the place. But the stir that the tidings of what Hillen intended aroused has proved more than he courted. The women have massed themselved against the desecration of their region, the merchants have backed them and the excise board has been so beset with the agents of the women that they have re- fused a license. For weeks the place has been ready for business, but the doors are still barricaded, and the women laugh us they trip by. It is a queer struggle between a power not often excited in New York and this most influential of all trades. All who know of the situation are waiting eagerly to see whether or no the poli- ticians dave to defy the women. CrLArA BELLE, ention. A The worst feature about catarrh i dangerous tendency to consumption, Hood’s Savsaparilla cures catarrh by purifying the blood. — s its We Are Spendthrifts, Knowledge In two states of the union alone one kind of accumulated eurth life, the petroleum and natura gas store, has boen 5o vapidly used up that within one generation alone stores which were millions of years ac cumulating will have been almost wholly exhausted. ain 150,000,00 tons of coal y brought to the pit’'s mouth, thoigh 1t hus become clear that that the effeetive supply will hausted at the prosent rate of ¢ tion in the course of ton or twelve gen- e s at the outside, The forests of the earth, at any rate in all civilized countries, ave being steadily destroyed, though it would be quite possible 80 to arrange matters that the supply used cach year should be replaced hy new growth during the same time, Like a spendthrift, the human race of to-day, boasting itsell “the heir of all the ages” in intelligence, 18 consuming at a rate fully one-hundred-fold beyond what is just the supplies which, as heir of all the geolo, vons, 1t has re- ived—in trust partly for future gen- e the celebrat- like a bell, alleviate hur my daughter w 7 '8, Mury Hinson, of Montrose,K nsas, * .\ud everybody thought she was going into consumption ly..ul her a bottle of Dr. R. V. Pie ‘Favorite Pevscription,’ and itcured her.,” Such facts as the above necd no comment. One of the best !lw\ s i an sufferings. 'L Lelund hotel, Chicago. THE OMAHA DAILY BEK: MONDAY, JANUARY 2. 1888, HOLLIDAY'S TRAIL OF BLOOD. COareer of a Western “Killer,” SBald to Have a Record of Sixtecn. A CELEBRATED CHARACTER His Exploits with the Earp Gang in Arizona—His Arrest and Subse- quent Life in Denver—Clos- ing Scenes. Denver Republican: When “Doc” Hollday died at Glenwood Springs & short time ago one of the most cele- brated characters in the western coun- try passed away. He was known as a desperado and had a vecord as a “killer,” Holliday had gone to Glenwood for his health. Pneumonia overtook him and the grisly rider soon after smote him down. Thus departed one of those characters formerly quite common in the west, but now, like the Indian and the buffalo, becoming quite rare. Many people who have seen him in Denver for the past four or five years never re- alized that they were looking at one of those men familiarly known as “kill- ers” and sometimes designated as ‘‘bad men.” He was formerly a dentist, Hence his title of *‘Doc.” The homicidal tt-ndon(-v was already strong within him! The doctor had an enemy. He used to tell the story him- self and say that he had every desire to kill the man. But the doctor was al- ways a prudent man. He feared he wouldn’t be legally protected if he took the man’s life. The doctor wanted re- venge, buthe was in a dilemma. An event occurred, however, which gave the doctor an opportunity he had hardly expeeted. His enemy came to his office with an aching tooth. The doctor the patient under laughing gas and be- fore his enemy had left the chair the quict doctor had extracted nearly every tooth he had in his head. This feat of dent had a tendency to injure the doctor’s business and nn- climate of Texas began to disagree with him. He went first, it is supposed, to that paradise of tough characters, the Indian territory anr on he emi- grated to Dodge € S, 1t is a little doubtful, n would seem, whether the doctor went to Arizona from Denver, from Dodge City, or from Las Vegas, New Mexico. The latest ac- counts say he emigrated from the last named health resort. Cowboys benton having a little fun would swoop down upon a town, getting drunk, shooting re- volvers in the streets, quarrelling in bar-rooms and _terrorizing the inhabi- tants. The E:\r[lv boys do not_appear to have models of all the virtues, but their tance in protecting the chief s in the territory from cowboy ons was not to be despised. Th sistance was rendered all the more val- uable by the fact that they were very earnest in rendering it. In fact, they found us officers of the law the strongest means of gratifying personal rancor and revenge. A deadly feud existed be- tween the “Rustlers,” which was the general name of the crowd to which the sarps and “*Doc” Holliday belonged,and rowhoys The Earpsand “Doc” had been ap- pointed deputy United States marshal, and one day they settled the question of cowboy rule in the streets of Tombstone very effectually. The Earps had organ- ized a strong posse of men. One day the cowboys camo riding into town on their very spirited broneos, shooting revol- vers and declaring their sanguinary in- tentions towards the ‘‘rustle But the ‘‘rustlers’ were ready for them,and from behind dry goods boxes and other laces of sheiter they poured many murderous volleys into horses and riders. “Doc” Holliday used to say that his crowd killed thirteen cowboys at that time. At all events the ‘“‘rust- lers” won a great victory, and Tomb- stone was a much quieter place after that. However, the cowboys vowed vengeance against Wyatt Earps, and they meant what they said. It was about this time that one of the younger members of the Earp family was killed. ‘‘Doc’” Holliday had vowed that for every one of the Earps killed two of the crowd who opposed them should die. The doctor was a man of his word and two citizens of Arizona, soon after the death of young Earp, per- manently disappeared. In those days the Earps combined their posi s as United States marshal with other occupations not quite so re- utable. They appear to have con- ducted a gambling house in Arizona, m\d it was not a very respectable gamb- ling house either. Accor(\mg to pretty authentic a\ccounls. “‘Doc” Holliday was a sort of ‘‘cay D in this establishment, and ‘“‘steeres tho sucker with lots of cash lowmds certain brace games, to the great henefit of the house of Earp Brothers. But the killing of the two enemies of the Earps broke the strength of theirreign in Arizona, The doctor and Earps are said to have been ‘in- dicted. The law was evidently not al- together on their side this time. Wyatt Earp and his brother fled to Trinidad, Col., and “Doc” Holliday came up to Denver. Michael Spangler was then sheriff of Arn pahoe county and the late Freder- ick W. Pitkin was governor of the state. Bunco-steerers and tin-horn men _were pretty plenty, but afterwards made un- comfortable throngh the efforts of Sheriff Spangler, and the same leadinfi lights in the confidence fraternity left town. One day, while Charles T. Linton, now of the city detectives, then a dep- uty sheriff, was seated in the sheriff’s office, o man who was evidently greatly ted came in and demanded the ar- t of *“Doc” Holliday, He said he ed heve with an order for the doctor’s arrest. He said he had seen the doctor on the street and wanted him arrested at once. Linton went out with the dnme Y. They encountered “*Doc™ Hol- y near Daniels and Fisher's build- ing on Sixteenth street. The doctor scemed in a peaceable humor, but the Arizona deputy, much to Mr. Linton's disgust, drew a pair of revolvers, and throwing them under the doctor’s face, commanded him to throw up his hands. He then began to abuse “*‘Doc” Holliday in what he consided a very indecent manner. After,the deputy had cooled off a little the doctor was taken to jail. Here he remained fourteen days. Mr. Linton is still of the opinion that he held at the time, that the crazy headed actions of the Avizona deputy precipis tated the troubles that I’ullnw«-«L and which resulted in Holliday's seeing Arizona again, but in Colorado his personal residence, Affer artesting the doctor M ton telegraphed to the gheriffs at Tycson and Tombstone. Replies ecame bac that the “Doc’ was wanted at both places. The telegraphic connection bed tween Denver und Arizona has perhay never begn so fully utilized, Day after diy the Arizonaauthorities tele raphed that they would come here. In the meantime the doctor’s friends were not idle. He had a certain strong following among the sporting element. One or two “‘bad men” from other parts of the state lll'u’und in here. Verg Earp came up from Trinidad, The doctor’s never making Lin- friends r@qmwmnd VD nung- One was that “‘Doc” Holliday was a_respect able citizen, a friend of law and order and a much-abused wan, The other was that if he was taRen back to Avi- | zona he would surely b8 taken off the train by a mob and fynched, The news- took up the case and urged the nor to grant a requisition and ave “Doc™ taken back to Arizona, It can be set down as a fact.” says a man who knows “Do¢™ Holliday wi ““that the doctor had killed at least six- | teen men. He usually looked out to have the law on his sifé and then blazed | away at them. The doctor was & pecu- linr'one and was a trifle deceptive in his methods. He would seem to back out and_hesitate and act as if afraid, then suddenly he would rush on his antago- nist and before the latter knew what was coming he was perhaps laid out stiff with ove of the doctor’s bullets in his carcass. The truth seems to have been llu\tlho doctor seldom lost his coolness. s venge was not thwarted by a l-lnnL ing to passion: it was sometimes slow and slmlic«f and always merciless when it came. The case was becoming a celebrated one. Thvre were delays in getting the requisition from the governor of Ari- zonn. Deputy Sheriff Linton and the whole sheriff’s office were at their wits’ end. Two_ Arizona requisitions had been found defective and the doctor was having the best of it. After about two weeks of suspense, Sheriff Bob Paul, came here from Tucson with the neces- sary papers for **Doc” Holiday’s arrest, Sheriff Paul was cool-headed and deter- mined. Had he come here at first in stead of the imprudent / na deputy, Mr. Linton believes things might have ended differently. In the meantime Colonel Deweese and the friends of **Doc Holiday were bring- ing ull the forces of the law, sympathy and pursuations to bear on the buse. They were making their strongest cf- fort withthe governor of Colorado. But the strongest represe ions were made to him that if he gave **Doc™ Hol- liday up he would deliver him into the hands of a gang of desperadoes and murderers. The authorities en- deavored to calm the governor’ fears. Sheriff Paul, who seems to have acted with perfeet good lnilh in the whole matter, offered to take *‘Doc” Holliday back to Avizona with perfect safe Not a hair ot the doctor’s head, he de- clared, should be injured duting the trip. His plan was to take the doctor to San Fran: 0 by the Union Pacifie, and then to take him to Arizona by the southern route. But the governor de- clined to grant the requisition. He said there were water tanks and other places on the railroad where a mob of cowboys and othe attack a train and take the pr s from the author- ties. It wasin vain that Sheriff Paul Paul argued that he would take the doc- tor to Avizona on a special train, and that there would not be the least dan- ger. But the shrewd lawyers and about equally shrewd friends of *Doc” Holli- day had other weapons at hand. The result of their efforts led to the coining of anew word in Colorado—""Holliday- Probably the scheme that was worked was not an original one. At d nilar ones have been em- eriminal cases since then. and s frequently been tried with pris- oners who have been demanded by I)opul\ Sheriff Hollingsworth when he vmed with requisitions. The s of practicing a <onfidence game in Pucblo w brought against the doctor and a writ_of habens corpus was asked for in order that he might be taken there. The.scheme worked. Judge Dawson, of the superior court, granted a \\ul of habeas corpus and “Doc” Holliday. instead of going to Tucson, went to Pueblo. There appears to have been nothing in the bunco charge. Atall events ‘‘Doc” Holliday was soon at liberty,and Sheriff Paul re- turned much disgusted to Arizona. After the doctor settled in Denver his life became that of the ordinary gam- bler and he did not always play in the best of luck. Frequently the Denver police arrested him for vagrancy. For the past five years his life has been a rather colorless one, relieved by one *‘shooting scrape” and ending with death at a health resort. Yet the doctor had some warm friends, who speak of him with tenderness and ut forward the usual sporting phrase: ‘He come of good people I)mk east and I won’t say nothing agin him.” “The doctor,” said Colonel Dewcese, ‘‘Had just as lief kill a man as not. All he looked out for usually wasto have the law on his side. I said to him one day: ‘Doctor, don’t your conscience ever trouble you?’ ‘No,” he replied, with that peculiar cough of his, ‘I coughcd that up with my lungs long ago.’ One little episode broke the tame cur- rent of the last five years of the doctor’s life. The scene was Leadville and the | characters were the doctor and a Lead- ville bar-tender. The bar-tender was Billy Allon, apretty well known char- acter about Leadville. Billy was also a special policeman. The quarrel was over a loan, which is something which the cxdnmry gambler, when in hard luck, frequently has to negotiate. Billy had 'loaned the doctor 5. Some days elapsed and the doctor failed to return the money. On a Sunday mor 5 Billy told t! e doctor that he had waites long enough and that he had promised to pay back the money, “T know I did, Billy,” said the doctor, “but T lost what T had Jast night and 1 can’t pay you. Billy replied angrily that he wanted his money and would give him till ‘Wednesday to pay it. If he didn’tcome to time then he (Billy) would be **fixed” for him, “Doc” Halliday meant, and w when Wednes **Doc™ money. knew what that 11 more enlightened came round. The had not come to time with the He was told by a friend that looking for him. Putting a revolver into his pocket and throwing a light overcoat on his arm the doctor started out to meet his man, He met him. It was in a well-known Leadville saloon and sporting resor Both men drew their vevolvers. BillY Allen dodged in some way and th bullet from Holliday’s revolver went through his wrist, narrowly missing his head. *'Doc” Holliday was arrested and taken to jail. But nothing came of it. The parties seemed to have agreed to fix the matter up, and the doctor was soon after veleased. The event above narr: about two yearsago. Last winter and spring “Doc” was in Deuve He figured, though rather indirectly, in | one or two little scrimmages between | sporting men, was arrested for vagrancy and released, The latter months of his life were passed in Leadville and Glen- wood. After two mouths’ illuess he died on November 8, - For fear of losing a day’s work, many persons put off taking physic until Sat- The better plan is not to d itas soon as needed, it 1 a hard spell of sickne it the most benefit from Ilm‘ Yeast amount of physic without causing you any inconvenience, loss of gppetitd or rest, take St. Patrick’s Pills. Th action on the Uver and howels lhmmwh, they give a freshness, te and vigor to the whole system and act in harmony with nature, l ed occurred il may | ( | gramadels of comtort A A Peculiar Story. The pension department has un- earthed the following peculiar story: A veteran in Pennsylvania applied for a L snsion as Danfel Tenney. of the Sighty-third Pennsylvania volunteers, company F. A woman in Stanton, Mich., applied about the same time as the widow of the same soldier. An in- vestigation was instituted, and resuited in showing that the woman was acting in perfect good faith and believed that she was a widow, and that. furthermore, she was a good and honest person. Her husband was a worthless man, who one day started out for a hunt and never came back., The neighbors of Stanton conciuded that he had perished in the woods, When the snow went off the next spring they found the mangled body of a man, a black bear and a cat lying in the woods near Oarwell. It was supposed Tenney had been killed by the bear. Tt is now found that Tenney was not killed by the bear, but had gone to Pennsylvania; where he took up life with another woman, who was his first and lawful wife, of whose ex- istence, it 9s presumed, the Michigan woman knew not. Finally the Pennsylvahia wife went to Nebraska to get rid of him. Then he married another woman. Now the question arises, who killed the bear and the man who was found dead by the bea The man certainly had on Ten- ney's clothes. Suspicion looks toward Tenney, and_the natural conclusion is that he may know more about the mat- ter than anyone els Meanwhile no one has got the pension, and there are three women who think they have an interest in the husbandship of Daniel Tenney. Mr. Tenney is in Pennsylva- nia and saying |w\hm g Relieved ol‘l(h u‘y 'I‘rulllllc. RossINT HOUSE, TORONTO, ON TARIO, Dec. 6, 1885, I have heen troubled with back ache for some time past, and great ditficulty in passing urine. Three weeks ago T applied an Alleock’s porous plaster, and have done so every five days since. most immediately T had partial ve and now [ am entively free from pain water passi ithout burnin, lief to s porous plaste heartily recommend them in any cidney trouble. J Towe my Fleanens X 60, ROCKISLANDGPAGIFIC RAILWAY 40 of fta central porition. ¢.0% relation to incs East of Chicago, and continyoul hines at terminal points West, Northwest and Bouthwest, {8 the trus middle link in that transcontinenta, aystem which | facllitates tavel and trafio between the Pac ain Jine and branches Inctude Chi- eago, Jolloy Ottawa, La Balle, Feortw, Genoreo, Molino The QGreat Rock Island RRoute Guarantees spesd; comtort certainty and safety. [ta r ect. 1ts passenger equipment . ‘appliances that experience hasprore. setul, and for luzurious accommodations fe uair: Its Express Tralns consist of superior Cegans Pullmen Paas cf Parlor and Cars, superb Dining Cars, providing delicious m d (between Chicag: B¢, Josepd, Atchison e ining Chalr Cars. 1t« man- te discipline exacting *‘The Famous Albert Lea Rot rof For tickcts, maps, f any desired inform ly to principal offices in 82 United States and C , or address, at Chicago, 8T, JOMN, st Oon') Manarur. cmmo SHORT LINE OF THB Chicago, Milwiukee & St. Paul R'y, The Best Route from Omaha and Council Bluffs to THE EAST TWO TRAINS DAILY BETWEEN OMAHA AND COUNCIL BLUKF8 »s-AND--- Milwaukee, Minneapolis, Cedar Rapids, Rockford, Davenport, Chicago, St. Paul, Rock Island, Freeport, Clinton, Dubuque, Elgin, ‘Madison, Janesville, Beloit, ‘Winona, La Crosse, And all other important points East, Northeast and Southeast. For through tickets call on the ticket agent at 1401 Tam' street, I Bation Motel, oF &t Uion Facio ot limaa Sleepers and the Snest Dining Cars in the run n line of the Chicago, Mi: ry attention is mployes of the Manager. nt General May 3 R, General nger and . unl- 'FORD, Assistant General Passenger sad Ticket Agent J.7.CLARK, Géneral Superintendent. i CHICAGO ano North- Western Railway Short Line. Omaha, Council Bluffs And chlcagn. om {0kt and ow periority unlt.{m by the patrons of Omnbe and Cbicago, are I8 two Lraive & d COACH= ES, which are the fiaest that gum 15 can creute; Tis PATACH T 6b & pd elostnee. | {19 VARLOR m "’rh and e‘ of w or e S The' it ect 1n union. Gepot with. (hose of Hhe ( Roriwestirn ity. 'in Chicago the trains of Cions conBection Wik those of all other enstern n, {pkton, '8 bl potata i the base; 8ag foF & Lckel Tie ‘““NORTHWESTERN." n wiah the best accommodation. All ticket sgents g‘llr ' Genl muu-r, ol Iil‘ BoLyEs. y Fus'r. Agoad VUraana OHUFCMILL PARKE e o8, Joneadireet, Between Mb maha, N Whol PARLIN OREN Ateahe f"il”e”enu i, g & Bnmu ones Street, Omaba. lanumcmren nr Bnclen Drilh, Seelcm, Iivators, WINONA MPLEM!NT co..w Amcnlmral llmmelmt:ll agmiBnmu “A. HOSPE, Jr. lrtlst:' Naterials, Pianos and m'mx, 1613 Douglas Btreet, Omahs, Nel ‘Boots and Shoes. W. V. MORSE & CO., Jobbers of | Bon!s and Shoes, Faram 8t On Boantanutactory, Summer KIIKENDALL. JONES & CO., (Buccessors to Reed, Jones & Co.) Wholesale Manafactarers of Boots and Shoe Agents for G S ERESRE, IS 0w CLARKE COFFEE CO., Omaha Coffee and Spice Mills. 'm:,n cam: Snms Bahnz Powder, undr ) ey dlml."om’- o Noprasnar 4I¢ e W. L. WRIGHT, Agent for the Manufacturers and Importers of Groctl(lgny Glals,sw‘are Lamps, Chimueys, ath bt Omabil Nebraskn, D. A. HURLEY, Commission and Jobbing, and Produce. Conslgnments sollcited, Lot Berry Boxes aud i . RIDDELL & RIDDELL, flpme qgfl Comm(sgmn Merchants, Etc. 1 Bou Jogter, Ghm L Game WIEDEMAN & CO. Prodnce Commisgion Merchants, Poultry, Butter, Game, Fruits, Ktc. 2X South L ‘Omahs, Nebrasks. Lt GEO. SCHROEDER & CO., (Buccessors to McShane & Bchroeder.) Produce Commission and Cold Storage, Omiaba, Nebraska, conl. Coke ang Lime. DMAHA COAL, COKE & LIME CO. Jobbers of Hard and Soft Coal. 3 Bouth 13th Street, Omaha, Nebrasks. J.J. JOHN Manafacturers of Illinois wmtc Lime, SR S Gk Gl ASKA FUEL CO snwpm of Coal and Coke. 214 South 13th Bt., Omaha, N (#74 A e M. E. SMITH & CO., Dry @oods, Farnishing Goods and Notions | ~ 1108 and 114Douglas, Cor. 1ith 8t Omaba, Neb. KILPATRICK-KOCH DRY GOODS Co lmnomm and Jobvers in Dry Gunfls Notions @ente’ Fumishing Goods.Corner ith and ithroey 8ta. DEWEY & STONE, Wholesale Dealers in Furniture. Faroem Street, Omabs, Nebraska. PAXTON, GALLAGHER & CO., Wholesale Groceries and Provisions, 108, 707, 700 and 711 8. 10th 84, Omaba, Neb. caltaral Imnlmentmmsj ummsfii_fil;_mn Deaer fiarflwoad me'," ’ Wooa Carpets a ER & CO., * Tmporters & Jowbrs of Millinery & Notig 208, 210 and 113 South 11¢h Btrest. "I T. ROBINSON NOTION GO Wholesale Notions and Farnishing 8 and &8 South 10U8 Bireet, Ormans, VINYARD & SCHNEIDER, o and Gents Fuuishing Goed, CONSOLIDATED | Tmtl Wholesale Refined and Lubricating Ofls. A3l0 Grease, otc., Omaha. A M. Bishop, CARPENTER PAPER CO. wnnlesale Paper Dealers, it m“.“n" wendos .‘!'.'.'.2'5’;’.".‘!.'."-332" pAper. te "Wss*rsn'fi'fii% ‘.u-an UNIGRT.. Auriliary Pablishers, Dealers s ty Manufactarers and Dealers in Rubber Goflll ©1) Clothing asid Leather Belting. 1005 Farnam Stree PllII!IJ! PLDGK and Efl[lflfl& Steam, water, mu‘ and |nl{‘|ml Wnolesale Pumps, Pwe Pmlm, Bteam and Water Su plien! Headqunrters for M Foost & Co's goods. 11il Farusw St., Omaha, U.S. WIND ENGINE & PUMP CG Steam and Water Supplies, Halliday Wind Mills, 018 and @ Knronin St Omahay Rowy, Acting Manuger. BROWNELL & C Efl!fll% Bflllfl!‘s aml filfllfl]“dl Mflflfilfl&l‘x' Bhest Iron W O PHIL. STIMMEL & CO,, \a Wholesale Farm, Ficld and Garden Wlfl 11 and 913 Jomon 8t., Omaha Storage, Forwarding and Lummlsxiun. Branct house of the Henne, Johu Kpencter, Propriotor. 920 Dodgo nndmml‘ forth T0th Street, Omahas __8moke Guok., Bollov H. K. SAWYER, Mannfacturing Dealer in Smoke Stacks, Britchings, Tanks and General Holler Repairiog. . dge Btreet, Omaha, Neb. i N & VIERLING, Woonghl &0t Gt 0 Bilng Wo | E"h Eé(;:hflun w'(;rl ::r:rll fowllnllrl\’mll‘mn‘.‘ 17th Btreet, Omala. ""OMAHA WIRE & IRON w‘oTa.uq { Mannfactarers of Wire and Iron Rflllllll‘ Desx rails, wtnnn",l-rdldu:lgwn OMAHA SAFE AND IRON WORKS, Maw'is of Fire & Burglar Proof Safes ta. fatl wor d mire fenclog, signs Ralivaon, Bropr. "Cor14th and MOLINE MILBURN&STODDARD Co unufacturers and Jobbers in Wazuus ‘Buggies, Rakes, Plnw§m .Gl B Pl Bia., Clnatia, N T MGCORD, BRADY & CO., Wholesale Grocers, 104h and Leavenworth Stroets, 0--!1 , Nebraskan D. M. STEELE & CO. Wholesale Grocers, M9, 1271 and 1223 Harney Street, Omaba, Neb. ALLEN BROS., Wholesale Gracers, 1114 sad 1116 Hamey St LEE, FRIED & 00.. Jobvers of Hardware and Nails, Tinware Shoet Iron, tfi"&nn&c foeHo UGH & ‘rAYLoR. Builders’ 'fiardwm & Seale Renair Shop Mechavica’ Tools gnd Bufislo Scales. 1408 Douglas-si. R Ecrmmr Wholesale ardware, 10th and Harpey 8i iNeb. Western Agents for Austin l'o::ln.- g“nflur:a!nc.?.l:_ ulb.‘b‘lp " MEACHER & LEACH General Agents for Diebold Eafe & Lock Coss | Pgrgxgll_f}, Burglar Proof Sals Pine Locks, ONES, Kenyon & Wholcsala and retail . Donksellers and Stationers, Stationery, Commereinl ntutionery, 165 Douglaus St. Ouintis, Neb. 7 .. Overalia. CANFIELD MANUFACTURING 00! Manufactarers of Overalls, ! Jeans Paats, Shirte, Etc. 1102 and 1104 Douglas Streely Fine Wi M. A. DISBROW & CO., d ‘Wholesale Manufacturers of Sash, Doors, Blinds and Mouldings, Branch 0.0.. ln and Isard Streets, Omahas, Nel BOHN MANUFACTURING co.w Manufacturers of Sash, Doors, Blin louldln 8, Stair Work and 1 un H rdwoofl Aog B orhoat e ard et it i‘a.vy Hardware. . BROATCH, Heayy Hardware Iron and sme Ings, Wagon Stock, Herdware Lu Ooriogs, N RER Tl Hivaey Birees Oty *" JAMES A. EDNEY, Wholesale Iron and Stecl, Wagon and Carriage W 4 Btook, Hardwi 10, 1511 82 1315 Laaveaworih She Omahar n-b"‘ nats, Caps, Eto. W. L. PARROTTE & CO., Wholesale Hatx, Caps and Straw Goods, 1107 Harney Sireet, Omaha, Neb. _Liquors WILLOW SPRINGS DISTILL.HV co and ILER & CO,, Importers & Jobbers of FineWines & Liquors East India Bitters and Domestic Liquors. 1112 Harney OMAHA LUMBER CO., Al mds of Building Material at Wholesale Street apd Union Facifio Track, Omaha. LOUVIS BRADFORD, Dealer fn Lumber, Laty, Lime, Sash, Doors, etc. ¥ards—Corner 1th and Douglas; Corner #h snd Douglas. C. N.DIETZ, Dealer in all Rinds of Lamber, 13th and Califoruia Sts., Omahs, Neb. " FRED W. GRAY, = _ Lflfllhi}]‘ Lime, Cement, Ete., Etc, Ll l!lhu Doulu Blc Omah HARVEY L Lumnj.fi 0., To Dealers Ouly. Offico. 1405 Farnam Street, Omaba, “JOHN A. WAKEFIELD, ' wnnlesale Lumher, Ete, ind A "".1:0" Cement, lnuq bu mgn o0 1 nuln. eR 44 QUi ST e T - ‘ aud public gatheriags, OMAHA PLANING MILL CO., Mantfctarers of Moudings, Sash, Dorsy Ana Biinds, Turning, Stelrwork, Bank g omcd %t 'and Poppiolon Avenus. = e STORZ & ILER, Lager Beer Brewers, it 121 North Righteenth Street, om.n-. Nob. SOUTH. ONAEA. GnTATMEL NP PALMER, RICHMAN & Live Stock Commission Merchants, Offoo—Room 3 gpponite Kxchange Building, Unlen McCOY BRO Live Stock cummlssmn Merchants, ! Marve mnmno-l free on application. Stookers snd R 08 | 9 Omabe il LORIMER, WESTERFIELD & MAI.B; Live Stock Commission, Room 16, Exchunge Bullding, U e, 4ding. Unlon Buook Yardey ALEXANDBR & FITCH Commission Dealers in Live Stock, Room 22, opposite Exchange Bulldl todt PP ¥ards, Bonth Omatia, Naf, Uio0 8 "TUNION sTOCK YARDS CO.. ' 0f Omaha, Limited. ! Joha ¥. Boyd, Superintendent. el THE CAPITOL HOTEL LINCOLN., N The Lest knowa ot mot popuinr 1 % e ¢ Hontiquarters for ‘Commercinl uien and: sl poitionl K. P ROGUEN Propriien