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KEEPING UP THE GOOD WORK, | 5.5 The Omahas Again Vanquish the Men From Milwaukee. BOTH TEAMS PLAYED LOOSE. latter, Patterson, his ank Des Moines and Chicago Take a Trip to Davenport and Des Moines Wins—Kansas City Gets a Game. Western Association Standing. Following 18 the official standing of the Western association teams up to and in- cluding yesterday’s games : Playea Won Lost PrCt 68 4“2 017 40 615 89 591 18 81 82 40 % 41 37 L —— Omaha 9, Milwaukee 4. Like Suturday’s game that of yesterday is not worthy of a very extended notice. The playing of the visitors was almost deyoid of anything that approached the brilliant, while that of Omaha was far below their standard. Both sides made costly errors, and the hits were scattered after a fashion that did not call for much enthusiasm, al- though there were about twenty-flve hun- dred people there ready to enthuse on the shghtest pretext. No scoring was done until the third inning, when the Omahas earned a run on three singles, Wilson being the lucky man to get home. In the fourth they added another on a hit and two bad passed balls, In their halt of this inning the visitors over- hauled the Omahogs and passed them by two runs. Maskrey got his base on balls, Pettee made Crooks’ wild throw flith's , Maskery crossed the plate. lined out a safe one and ran_home ahead of , who smashed the ball way out to enter for a home run, The Omahogs came right _back at them, though, and tied the score. Wilson hit for a couple of cushions, Miller got his error by Forster and both scored ou error by the same unlucky individual. The Badgers coutd not help their position Jn their haif, and in fact failed to score after the fourth. In the sixth the home team piled up three more runs. O'Connell was hit by the pitcher, Cooney made a two bagger, and th ran home on two successive passed balls, In the eighth, Moffett, who took Annis’ place in the fifth inning on account gf an in- jury s sustained by the latter in making a rilliant running” catch, scored on Cooney’s second handsome dr In the ninth the Poet hit a long fly to Mc- ase on an A second Aleer, who graciously muffed the same, and | ¢ and the Highlander went clear around to third on his miserable throw in and scored on & passed ball. That's all there was of i official score: Here is the OMAHA. AB. R, DB. 80, PO. A. E. | abducting Elsa Ehas, daughter of the late |, b 2E Ses g R R ) ry Elias, a brewer of New York. Miss 4 1 1 1 0 0 0] Eliasresided with her mother and sisters at 5 1 2 0 5 5 1| Cossel, Germany. Mollor was arrested for O‘(ommll 1b. 4 1 1 0 7 0 1] thesameoffense in Germany, but managed Cooney, s3 5 1 2 0 4 5 0] toescape with t irl 1o Queenstown. McGarr, rf. e nanl A SR G ! —_— ——-——— quV,illlson,“cb_ . : f ? (‘l g (l’ ‘l’ The Weather Ind ications. er, 8b. For Nobraska and Iowa—Local rains, Suafler, p. +4 000 0 3 Ofnearly stationary temperature, vaviable Totals. .. .88 9 10 3 9 16 4 “'i;"‘!-D L \ = "or Dakota—Rain, nearly stationary tem- AUKEE, porature, variable wind % R B. 8B TO. A, E. — - gcl\}esr.m o ;i ; 3 ? g :1’ { The UNION PACIFIC carries the ‘'orster, 88 (% United States C N il, lsi,"fl““ii;’b- : 2 8 ‘; g 3 ll) (‘) te 08 J_Vulllxlld Mail uller, 1b. 34 g B b CagRdr 0 it 000 Throe Fronch Duels. Potteo, 3b shgitioliigive 9.8 1 Pall Mall Gazette: In Louis XIV.’s Grifth, p.. .4 1 1 0 0 9 0] timetheactress Maupin insulted a lady Shenkle, 1f. .8 0 1 1 0 0 0f|ata ball and was ordered out of the Mills, c... .8 1 1 0 9 0 2|room. She would goif the gentlemen 48 4T e who espoused thé lady’s cause would AR R =] meet her outside. *“After a hard com- R A bat,” s0 the account runs, ‘‘she killed Earned runs—Omaha 1, Milwaukee 1. Two base hits—Cooney, Wilson. Home run MeAleer. Double plays—Burns and Cooney McGarr and Wilson; Forster, Pettee and Fuller. Bases on balls—Shaffer 4, Grifith 2, Struck out—By Grifiith 6. Passed balls— Mills 6. Wild pitchcs—Shaffer. Time—1:40. Umpire—Hagan. Kansas City 5, Minneapolis 4. KANsas City, Mo., Auvgust 5. —[Speocial Telegram to Tae Bee.|--Good batting by the home team and poor pitehing by Klopt combined to give the game to the Blues to- y. o r " em, and then spared his life. JEL b hoary torys iy sorstoly Bt to Kl G ke e And M b Plohtc. who had quarreled about an opera dancer, agreed to fight a duel in balloons. May they ascended in two balloons from a field near the Tuileries, armed with blunderbusses. The balloons kept about eighty yards apart,and when the; 800 feet high, on signals given, i‘lsquv fired. He missed h Grandpree fired into Pisque’s balloon, and he and his seconds were dashed to pieces on a housetop. grounds in bad shape, but the captains de- cided not to disappoint the thovsands of peo- ple who went out to see a game. Long broke his record and made four bad errors to-day. The fielding of both nines was much better than was expected under the circum- stances, but the mud prevented any pheaom- enal playing. Score: ansas City....0 0 0 3 0011 0-5 iuneapolis 01200010 0-4 Elrned runs—Kansas City 4, Minneapolis 8. Twobase hits — Long, Reynoids, gwnruel. Krug. Double plays—Ardner. 'irst base on hllllll—l)\' Swartzel 1. Hit by L'chcd ball—By Klopf 1. First base on e rs— Kansas City 1, Minneapolis 2, Stru nut—B_v Swartzel 6, Klop! 2. Time—32:25. Umpire—Cusick, L Des Moines 3, Chicago 2. Davesrort, August 5,—[Special Telegram to Tue Bee.|—Des Moines and the Chicago Maroons played a sehedule gamo here to-day | | which had been moved from Chicago by con- ut of both clubs. The score: 00300000 *-3 .0\)1)003000-—-.! Baso hits—Des Moines 0, Maroons 7. Er- rors—Des Moines 1, Maroons 8. Pitche; Swith and Dwyer. Umpire—Quest. No Game at Sloux City. Stoux Ciry, In., August 5.—[Special Tele- gram o Tue Bee.]—A heavy rain prevented the playing of the game to-day between the Bioux Cile! and St. Paul clubs, As the result of an agitation against Sunday playing, in- unction pi Japers were placed in the hands of e sheriff yesterday, which would have been served if the game had been called. OTHER GAMES. Yesterday's Winners in the Amer- ican Assoclation Contests. ROOKLYN, August 5.---Result of today's 3 001830000 0-8 0000000 0-1 CINCINNATI, August 5.—Result of to-day's Blucitnati .0 0000410000000 1— 6§ QCleveland. .200000030000000—5 PriLaberruis, August 5,—Result of to- day’s game: Kansas City Union Pacifies 5, Crane Rros. 4. GrAXD ISLAND, August 5. —[Special gram to Tus Bes.|—About two thousand people gathered at the falr grounds this afternoon to witness the game of base ball between the Crane Bros. of Omaha and the Union Pacifics of Grana Island. The Crane Bros. were rattled in the first inning, but fiofl their feet in_the sccond and pia :“ to the finish. The Uzion racif, yod th! ut the whole game Sma run ‘was splendid and they found wcuu!ulu The game was o batteries, vt’sx. little work being oaoooono_.. —Union Pacifics, Rouke and rane Bros, Hart llgu Swarte, te thirteen men. Batteries ter & Young, and S. Patterson and J. Patter- son for Plattsmouth, Bellevue, 1481 | and for two medals. 1440 | firing will be the skirmishing of Tuesday, ‘444 | Wednesday, Friday and Saturday. Oun Mon- a7 | day morning, August 13, the me presented, and an address will Colonel Morrow. The band of the Twenticth infantry will go down to the range. Colorel Henry has charge of the contest, assisted by Captain_Coolidge_and Lieuten- ants Van Leon, Hutchinson as @ staff. The range officers will be Licutenants Burns, Narring, Tyler, Dwyer, Jones and_Gregg. firing is well worth a_trip by who can maki Omaha by the B. & M. railroad at % a. m. and returning at 5. Stovx Crry, gram to Tue B for a shooting 11th inst., live pigeons at th Tk SUNDAY Bie Cheyenne gave *Henr of the Pullman porter killed by an insane man on the train Satur- Another correspondent is of the who served th o at the expiration s ago. ELlis was a day night. opinion that ke wa e medium-sizged mulatto. An impressive fum'rul Bellevue at 100'clock Saturds the remans of the late William Kayser. [ lm de- tho: Presbyterian from Omata and Bellevue were present to pay their respects to the memory of the de- The casket, was adorned by many beautiful floral tributes. LoxpoN, August 5.—A named Oscar Moller, was arrested at Queens- town and brought to London, charged with ball room.” Oi pistols. shot, said b arge fami lector of interest came the farmer’s wife 1o which slept her twenty-second child. The collector jokingly told the woman if she would dozen, THE OMAHA DAILY /BEE: MONDAY. AUGUST 6, 1888. Time of game-—1:50. —[Spe 2. ]—The game in this city yeste Score. ter& Youngs0 8 0 0 5 3 0 attsmouth. 0000001 zhes and Morrissoy for Je ——— The Shooting Contest at Bellevue. The eighth annual competition of the De- partment of the Platte will be opened by the crack of the rifie at $:80 this morning at There will be present twenty- five officers and 174 enlisted of the former and ninety-two of the latter will be competitors who will contest for “4s4 | Places in tho department team of twolve The most interesting men. Brooke, @ picnic of tha vis 0 p. m. Will Try to Beat Bogardu 5 for 500 a side. y yards rise, Supposed to be the Porter. Ellis Moll, to 1838 in troop H of the N schargod from the srvic for the Dl‘nll. cluded short_biography of d by Rev. W. W. church. ased. Arrested for Abd them all and quietly returned to the There is a_record in 1518 of a duel between Fournier and Dupont that lasted nineteen years! They agreed treaty to meet when within 100 miles each other, and they had some des- ) One day Du- pont said: *“Weo must end this quarrel.” e wanted to gt married, and proposed who was a crack > was mad, They arranged to meet in a wood, have two shots each, and fire drew his enemy’s two shots by strate- In 1808 ate sword combats, Fournier, from behind trees. ——— Thousands of cures follow the use of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy. —— She Lifted the Mortgage. Lewiston Journal: When one of the early settlers of bought his farm he had to leave a mortgage on it. promptly for many years and raised a One year. when the col- round, he found ing the m»udlu in Gouldshoro, Ho paid the make up the even i Hood s Sar'sapafllla Combines, in a manner peculiar to itself, the best blood-purifying and strengthening reme- dies of the vegetable kingdom. You will find this wonderful remedy effective where other medicines have failed. Try it now. It will purify your blood, regulate the digestion, and give new life and vigor to the entire body, “Hood's Sarsaparilla did me great good. T was tired out from overwork, and it toned meup.” Mns. G. E. Stumoxs, Cohoes, N, Y, “Isuffered threc years from blood poison. 1 took Hood's Sarsaparilla and think I am cured.,” Mzs. M. J. Davis, Brockport, N. Y. Purifies the Blood Hood's Sarsaparilla is characterized hv three peculiarlties : 1st, the combination of ;‘mdhl agonts ; 2d, the proportion; 3d, \he % of securlng ine active medicinal vies, “The result is a medicine of unusual strength, effecting cures bitherto unknown. Send for book containing additional evidence, :nm--m ) tones up my s "t BRI RS sl R Hood'l G.rl! rilla -flyna:mo &lfla‘ ' o . 100 Doses_One_Dgilar. Eleven Pickering and To witness the citizens, leaving August 5.—[Special Telo- The money was posted to-day betweon J. H. Builoy, of Crow Creek, Dak., and Captain Bogardus, the champion, atch here next Saturday, the The match is 100 special telegram from Mole” as the name who was shot and e was held at morning over any \'Ildn Dupont In were is_aim, and then 50 cents. Me., interest two whenever that might occur, he would lift the mortgage and give them an unincumbered title to the place. The next year he was on hand plompv,lv to collect the interest due, when lo! the snme cradle lay a fine pair of twins, which made up the two dozen; and of course there was nothin, the proud pavents from debt. in to do but free canire—s. 5| A WONDERFUL CATTLE RANCH —— Jetter & Youngs 12, Plattsmouth 2. Pratramovti, Neb., August to Tie B day between the home team and the Jetter & Youngs, of South Omaha, was won by the In'the last half of the first inning T, Plattsmouth's pitcher, sprained ,'and he was succeeded by S. Pat- rson, the first baseman, who fanned out 1 0-12 0—-2 Fearful Plunge of the Stampeding | Oattle Over the Precipice. ROMANCE OF AN EXILED INDIAN, With His Newly Won Bride He Drifts to Death—Game Which May Be Seen but not Captured. The Lone Herd, MEEKER, Colo., August 4—[Special toTHE BEn.]—Seventy-five miles north- west of this place is the most wondertul cattle ranch in the world. Within a space five miles in length and a half 1n width roam a herd, upon whose sides the branding iron has never been placed, and around whoso horns the lariat has never tightened. But a score or even fewer of them haye ever even seen & man or horse or other animal than of their kind, and in trath their kin, except at a distance of pearly six- teen hundred feet high above them. The Indians call them ‘‘p’chek-up,” or red buffalo, and yet if an Indian who has seen them should be asked about it he would laugh and shake his head and all the information obtainable would be **P’chek-up ’em red; no ketch ‘em.” Ther: e more than four hundred of this herd, and yet no man owns them; nor is there a man, white or black, or copper colored, who has ever been able to possess a single hoof of these fat and tempting beeves. The cattle are in a pri there is one me thml of ¢ travel that r th to the ad- VaHtuLGU * BeUte Diteka’ 1o 6.4 Ay to get in except it be by the use of a rope a thousand feet iv length. As the In- [ ‘em: no ketch ) On the two long sides of the n!)!uug ce in which these cattle ronm rise precipitous, and even concaved rocks for five and six hundred feet, yawning black and unsurmount- on, out of it 1ipe, but to ab) At either end scethes and rushes the Yampa or Bear river. For miles above and for miles below it plunges and stumbles on in its headlong haste to reach the arms of its parent, the sly less tumultuous, but deeper en river, story of the way in which these came there is as strange as their curious. s ago when the govern- ment troops were pursuing the N mon murderers of the innocent vie! unn of the Mountain Meadow sacre, the Danites, or aveng ing angels of the Mormons, fled for their lives into what was then literally the wilderness. A fow of those who had been the blindest followers of Lee, the Mormon fiend incarnate and whose hands were red with the blood of women and children, found in their wanderings a pretty valley on a strenm which flows from the Wasatch range into the Green river. They stuck th t camp ind during the'r sagaciou lich told him ther stay. They could hardly have chosen, in all Utah, a mmu foriile or more isolated spot. They called it Ashley, and .lhnutlhunlmvu nee gath- ered more of their sect, until wheve the refugees posted their picket of guards on the lo sly nights of the first summer has grown a thriving village. Like the wonderfuk flat top moun- tains of Colorado, this home of the im- vrisoned herd has no likeness in the world. It recalls in its inaccessibility the marvellous stories of the valley of ver- dure into which Mayne Raid’s adven- tures only found their way by the assist- ance of the balloon. It is 140 miles from the Union Pacific railroad, south, and 145 miles north of the Rio Grande Western. Until within five years it has been isolated entively; but ‘now it is but thirty miles from the Unita reservation, and furnishing sup- plies for the ageney forms quite a busi- ness for the community. It is a tenet of the Danites that rob- bery or theft from a gentile is no crime. So it was thought to be only a cunning trick when John Wyeliife, one of the Mormon settlers of the new town, and his three sons made a night sor Henry’s Fork, in Wyoming, and c: away three hundred head of ecattle ranging there. This was in 1876, Tho owners of the cattle discovered the losse) of their stock a few days after they were gone, and started in pursuit. The ‘Wiycliffe’s had their friends along the trail and were warned by signals uf the akes, built their rht their coming of the pursuiug party. Accord- ingly they drove the eat- tle as fast as they could travel on eastward, across Green River and upalong the Umu', with the inten- tion of reaching the Elk mountain country in morthwestern Colorado, whore they would be practically safo from detection and their stock also could secure the most succulent of food. The thieves and the stolen herd had reached a mesa of inviting grass at sun- down one day and halted to camp for the night. A terrific storm srose. The lightning flashed incessantly and the thunder pealed and cracked with unin- termitting fury. The four men des- perately held the terror-stricken eattle by riding about them co wtly., But the wild foarfulness of the furious storm excited the brutes beyond measure. They surged and ginned, every moment growing less subject to control. All at once, as by one mad impulse, they stampeded. A stampeds of euttlo by duy is asight caleulated to strike terror to any heart lest there should be some human being in the pathway. A stampede by night and during a furious thunder storm, with the lightning revealing the huge mass of frenzied brutes hurling itself on like a living catapault, frantic with fear and as restless as the storm itsell, is one of the grandest and most nppnll» ing of spectacles. All the mad might of frenzied animal forceis aroused, and, self-destroying, as well as destroy- ing all in their way, they rush on until they fall dead-like or plunge into some abyss. John Wyckliffe and his sons met their fate amid the lightning’s glare and the thunder’s roar. They endeavored to head off the stampeding herd, Instead they and their horses were swepton and driven, in their terrvor to escape the charge "of maddened animals, over the brink of the awful precipice which frowns up from the waters of the Bear. After them plunged the whole fright-crazed herd and down to the bottom of the fearfu fall went horses, riders,and horned creatures. Out of th plunge of life to what was seemingly certain death for ali, a few of the herd were not killed. Thuea which had gone ahead formea a cushion of death. Maimed, ltunnm.. but still invested with a spavk of life, hen the dread storin was over the liv- fl.uuu crawled out frorm the mase beneath them aud formad & nualeus fo. the herd which now roam will within their rooky conflues. Oa the banks of sae fl'.l‘ strotohing back & few hoadevd yords groov succulent @uasses, «ad ogon thia the cattle have {)rmmm\tml and thrived, To those who ook at thiem from the edge of the preci- ice, they are small and as wild as | | deer. They have been shot at to see the effect, and have learned to regard the appearance of a man, whether Indian or white as a menace from which they flee, (‘h\mhurhm over Hehlullmrg. and two years more were ent in Rome, wh he it. During 1879-"80 he w of a daily newspaper in India. The passed in this country, and in ‘May and June, 1882, he wrote “Mr. Isaacs, the WARM WAVES Are rolling in. You can’t escape them ; but you can escape the sleepe less nights, loss of appetite, and languid feeling that result from draine ing the nervous force by ms«-nhv or mental exertion in sume mer's torrid days. The use of Paine's Celery Allahabad, following two years he rocks and through under brush in the }’,‘,”(,',‘f‘,ufl;{‘.t "",'.:i,"'m:'::.“ ‘[\‘.'i"“,',"'“l'h,r’"‘," ) Compound, that great nervetonic, will at once chuse o a point of eoncealment. The ol and Ttalian, und reads Latin strengthen the nervous system, and fortily it place where the thieves and their (,mk, Sanskrit, Arabic and Persian. against the attacks of summer debility. This ::L’.rfi“ia‘?f"l the herd fell is plainly | Ho has some Kknowledge besides, of preparation is a medi cine—not a drink. Ttisa a pyramid of bones which | muk rises to a height of twenty feet. The ghastly reminders and relics of the human and animal victims of the terrible leap shine forth white and glistening when the sun is high and reaches that spot with its full glare. The progeny of the surviving animals from the fall arve fat and sleek though, and have their sunny beds, deer like, where they lie for warmth in the winter and to them the monument of skele isnosource of disquietude. There i fierce mountain lion or more danger- ons bear, nor in factany other anim thing within this cow Garden of Eden. And yet too, no man has been able to reach or disturb them. The Utes have a tradition that savors of a romance connected with this won- devful spot. It is, that a young buck who was of Piah’s renegado band be- come cnamored of a young quarter breed Sioux squaw, and sought to take her to his tribe. The Utes have a vir- tue, if such it may be called, of total prohibition from mingling with the whites in ma ge relation. Even where there have been instances of women of their tribe becoming too familinr with white men they have in- variably been visited by the severest punishment, the oyed sh and Russian The author of **William Shakespeare Portrayed by Himself,” (New Yor! Worthington & Co.) says in his first chapter: *I shall show that in the very plays in which that extraordinary gen- tleman, Mr. Ignatius Donnelly, has di covered a cipher showing that th were written by Lord Bacon, the real author, Shukespeare, reveals himself, his life, his character, as plainly as any author ever revealed himself in one of his works His work which identifics the poet with Prince Henry has as its aim the refutation of Donnelly cipher, which is characterized as *‘vain and pernicious babble.” “In War Times at La Rose Blanche,’ by M. E. M. Davis, (Boston: D. lmlhlup Company) is a picty s 0t Liloion, large southern plantation during the war when all the men, and even the boys, were away in the service, and only the mistress with the smaller childven and the house servants were left behind. The nareative is not an imaginary onc the characters are real, and the mai incidents are related as they r happened. The author’s style is bri and half humorous. The story is full of pathetic touches, and the reader who does not feel his eyes moisten in some the best tonics, giving lasting It cures all nervous diseases, -ml health to thousands whose cause of their many ills. It is season, when fecble persons are disease which is nearly always fatal. Paine’s Celery Compound, by restoring perfect health, almost entirely re moves the liability to this dread disease. If you feel the effects of summer's heat, you can't afford to delay another day before gaining the vitality only obtained by the use of this great medicine. Sold by Druggi $1.00, Six jor $5.00, Send for elght-page paper, with many testimonfals, WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO. BURLINGTON, VT. scientific combination of benefit to body and \mnin and has brought new Iifi- weakened nerves were the| especially valuable at this 8o liable to sunstroke, a tons DR. HORNE’S ) Electro-Magnetic Belts ! 3 The Grandest Triumph of Efectric Sclonco— Selontifle Scientifically Made and huiluny Applied. Stta, DISEASES CURED WITHOUT MEDICINS. URK YOU F v s it S i ralals, Sel o ’*? e m-, "":" 'fll'n. :“flmm.- Asney GrSecle: IT Wit Kerr & Co., Chicago, hava progeny des parts of it must have a particularly Hlogd Dinc: with the almost equal certainty of Kill- . The ten sketches which | [l e ety .-wfi"mu unh--wllm It ek AU e ten rthos which | M SRR (L5 WHEN ALL ELSE FhAhll.g. jaho and his Sioux bride they had no | Nt it Wouloni, ko B ..-..r....l’!"'n.-:° o Mokt ot Rrade welcoms, Added to figr thyee-fourth 'Oharies E 1 an 00k Y aran, B pol eioaa Ool Connl white blood was the still_worse odium et Ao, Bamibaan, i ; : blished A Pure Souled I iy an Surolt has aceo R o LU AL e S L L A ). dar, by 4 vnurb-llhunuuun!\n S it o Tetie y Indinn bloo erVeins | 4 honymous writer. In a review from obi. Hall, alderman, 160 L- Streot, Now was Sioux, a tribe which the Utes hate as they hate no white orother being, The hlunxl]lu\n- Se-ne-jnhoand the woman After weeks of outlawry, often otisands b Dr. HORIIE’S ELECTRO MAGNETIC BELT R siro; produces & conttiows current; conreya slectricity’t rn nich the n the herved. Fetierating 4 continuuus cur glectricity (10 or 18 hours qut ot #4) throu huu(bleh ma ous Immmdhtal‘ and producing a new eirculation of the iffe forvet—thy blood, advanc The Open Court ***A Pure Souled Liar’ is, for original- ity of plot. finished and entertaining style, fo superior to all othors—currenta ot o syareskrong o mild as the weare ERa) Nie petingiicdel DA O and high purpose, one of the most y ot B ith whon Al other trentmont was fatled. Tho merite of B nging to o XSS | notable books of fietion' vecently issucd '*;r"'::.‘l't":,'.:*..flm'"':?,z:'-"“-':"""' SR o vhaiie donsui determined thut they would seo | [Fom the press. Direct el €S sy ieturor, 161 Wabash Avesse Ohloago. ined thut ¢ outd seo | gy verity of purpose ch erize 2 0 ttle valley which ‘the Indians | SINCOrity of pury ; e Bl EitEa call the “lower carth,” and try to find | PAge. The personnel of the story ure by Dl. HORNE’S ELECTRO-MAGNETIC BELT-TRUSS, ; 01108 theva they douldrdwellsn chosen from ti perplexing s o - et peace and would bo rich in possession | (s, marked by uspiving 1“‘;'* [" S—— S— —_— = of hundreds of animals, the flesh of | 8RS x'L‘:.lf Tt ’y""“” 029 which they could eat, while from the Lisalt Liatih bty R HI skins they could muke their clothes Sty UHIR T CHARLES SHIVERICK, and atecpee. They tried w score of R AL SO o ways in which to gain access. Doscent WAL ERVULLE B ERGIALALD0) Furniture and Draperies! death. The the river i were the only cours buek pu- | ~\|'!'”"‘|-'] th Lyouie ‘}'",'f""“ \“‘hu are 3 tiently mn a duge ',f 1 ‘\l g and naking their influence felt in Americ i i i p:m'xn'o Tt b e lves piiisg | A5soR is to he uumbered the author of Childrens’ Carriages, Refrigerators, Etc. above they launched the that brilliant novel, “Guerndal 1?00‘-1‘)0%- 1210 Farnam Street, Omahu. themselves lashed to it, and went whirl- | Whose new story, he Residuary - = ing and shooting on downward. When | Legatee,” is now pablished with the they merged from the dark walls into | Writer's l':‘>“;‘!~ I‘{n'l *’”'N;" ‘(’ S, - el oo the” opening which they had hoped 2), upon the t >, by Charles Would e their Imprbgnntic rofuge. tye | Seribhors Sons, New Yarl, ~This stovy GREAT SACRIFICE in PRICES OF dugout was bottom up und already t appeared ayear 2o 1m Sc wzine, when it wa commen tad upon. as diapl splintered by the contact with a thous- | jagged rocks, while it bore on the Musical Instruments FOR TEN DAYS ONLY. Violins, Guitars, Banjos, Mandolins, Arord[am, Zithers, Au- toharps, etc., AT COST. | | CRAP & STERLING, stlass curvent two lifeless | lity in the conception and bruised bodies. This re. | ment of the plot and in the effective use markable spot is where the Of the element of my , combined with a crisp style brillianey to tf was published sori tenlarged the stor, form it will be re t. The mountain and Cross ay well-known landmarks and white precipitous sides out from river. Amoug the now liviu of tho aceuracy of the Blue both mountuin, th() B e ThaiAba Cfithe GEiitante ot thd lateusadintithe ,and the suspenso S ATy s S RIEER VS Pl W el Rl i that the most 114 N. 15th Street. A\‘..\(,,mcr Powell, more familinely novel reader cannot fail to be in- = — known as “*Coon,” who malkes his head- In Lee and She sories of popular el school, one of the most ir ctive books upon subjects connocted with the war of the revolution that has appenred in print will | ed. It is the third in the se preceding num- Stories of American Noble Deeds of Our i alled “*Boston Te: s of the Ameri- o Many Daring ard’s forthcoming or. Pow A sies for home » good V others quarters in M telligent man, of man years ago, hi desive to veturn | is an - KKE ERIE SEMINARY, PAINESVILLE, OHTO. !“uru‘tl‘nn plonsant gt leal(ul, Conras of Study extended nnd To oudont tenchors e MTHS MATY EVANS, PRINCID: who drifted lost both ambition home. He has and spent ten_years in earning a precarious livelihood ns o guide and trapper, and has frequently visited this particulur spot. The other mmuuum physical for- mation which has ated animal lifo R R T Rt T iy KINGSFORD’S OSWEGO STARGH! Party and Other can ftevolution, Rel Deeds of the Old He one of the Flat Top mountains in G 4 :3," revised and field county, Colorado. This mountain | 8dapted from Henry C. Watson. Asa stands up like n gigantic cubs. On one [ book for supplementary reading it is 1. As a book to interest pung people in the story of the Amer- ican Revolution, it atteactive and educating, and it will easily take a high unsurpas side conne perceptible the place where the nglink withits broad level sum- enturies ago. Maris of a**hog- 1 out and down to e mountaing, can be plainly | place asone of the shining volumes in z“'B From vantage points some miles | the pop Eapianacieniingi o Leoiand ure’ I ver oss \Iy' orn arc [] Shepard ave now publhishin will d field g lose on a @ sue, displays won- day moving animals on the great [ ~Tabie Talk, Y FOR T"'S LAUNDRY. FOR THE TABLE. Those who have seen m pro- | derful skill in its contents fitted nounce them as heyond doubt species of | to the month. The number THE VERY PERFECTION OF QUALITY. the moose, bearing the flat, brond horns | opens with one of Mr. 2 and having all the shambling actions of n August Day, these animals, now unknown to the game seekers of this section of the punicd with an apt illustration. United States. Whether some day an Ror Ref to1lows; -bont 'DEWEY & STONE adventurous balloonist will alight on pd S e y E ay an some pithy advice we would u\l like to vi 4 st wi i adopt, if we could; “New Menus for this table land of the Flat Top moun- | August,” by Mrs. Rtorers “A Mountain tain and bring down one of these cu- in Blackb y Time, ' rious survivors of an otherwise extinet | “In Cupid’s Court”—all \\dl written g e et eR LAt e e ) uhich shows | A magnificent display of everything useful and ornamental in the furniture maker's art, at reasonable vrices. ley of the “lower earth” on the | that the hero is getting deeper in the ing poems, “Chapte Bear river and enjoy a steak from the A Double Play.” for the juve- loin of onéof the lone herd, can only ashionable Dinuer and’ Tea be surmised. As yet the foot of man Toilets lie May Forney; **Home has pressed the gr; of neither, De Fashionable Cr — e “Dining-Room Facts and Fancies;” a BOOKS AND AUTHORS, very entertaining and instructive paper T on “The Olive, its Growth, Use, Senti- There are reported to be 14,000 peo- | ment, and Antiguity,” by Joseph Whit- ple in London who make a living by | ton: Mrs, Rover's “Household Inquir- writing books and contributing to the jes” and “New Things for Table and magazines and the daily newspupers. Kitehen:” ‘‘After-Dinner Talki” also The author of Leavenworth | the result of the ';'(unl,‘);lv.l-i]l)::::llm]l.‘i; S|ee A" Nflght, Happy A" Dfl.y Case,” Katherine ( lives in Buf- | Bacon Problem P falo, where sho is writing a new story. | the names of the winners. ase- “\\alflnlnm-rh-«l but, finding nows to agreo with our 1ittlo girl 1 your Lactated Food! v began ut onco te gain Aesl, and improved in health, To-day £he s s bri; , and hearty as ‘\u)'h' Her well known book is said to have | Ball Problom is also g ut onico i N i + ", n C! ¢, sloeping twelve hours at o stretel, and waking up laughing every moru ng."'— Win. 8, Trasls, reached a cireulation of 200,000, | try the skill of Table T Simach St Toronto, Ont RRLAN F. Marion Crawford, the novelist, cutting Teeth Eas“y was born in Italy: on August 2, 1854, BBy 5 fa r was T as Crawford, the *Lactated Food s an excellent food for teething chil aby 18 usiug It, 4107 2utting her tee Es Sustioy. was Thoinas Granlond she this hot weether without any trouble."—Mrs, Minva 0. Hran seulptor, and his mother was the sister i Saved from Cholera Infantum of the late Sam Ward and of Mrs. Julia Var: we., Vhen twelve years old Ward Howa, A #Our baby had Cholera Infantum, snd until we tried Lactated Food, wocould find nothing tostay onite stomack. Itrotained your Food without auy trouble, aud soon recoyered."Jf cgan, West Montery, Pau s picnic of painting the k n( lhu houses he struck, and one of th young Crawford was sent to St. Paul’s iton oo thick at one ‘THE RESULT OF USING females laid him out with a beer gl s‘huol at Concord, N. H. During 1560 rute +" LACTATED FOOD. -70 ho lived in Imly, and from 1870 to 1874 he was in England, at Trinity Col- left some ugly cuts on his head and fac n L lot *Tho N l the of lege, Cambridge. During the next two Easily vl\.lmruk At Druggiste=g \,h.. Ul [ 18 Wiids, Ricuanvsox & Co., Bui u-uluh. vt Plump and Rosy Babies “Had it not been for Laotated Food our 1ittlo bab; Sho Lus boon asing it for three ‘months, nd 15 a plump, bealthy, rosy.cheeked baby.” Kolomo, Ind, st lave died. Mollic Lappin, K i Done Up With a Beer Glass. A report was current on the streets last evening that a man had been stabbed in a “Tenth street bagnio. On being investigated, however, it was found that iustead he ha been hit in the head with a beer glass. He is a bricklager from South Omaha, and was years he studied in Karlsruhe and in PAID UP CAPITAL, $300,000. SURPLUS $40.000. AMERICAN LOAN AND TRUST COMPANY, DEPARTMEN UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK BUILDING. \ B°t Interest on deposits, compoundod semi-annually. g, 6 ' Savings Certiflcates with iriierest counone attached. BEST FOR DEBENTURE BONDS in Denominations of 8200, $330, 6530, | and $1000, bassd upon First Mortgage Real Cetate Scaurltles deposited with, and bonds certified by tha Union Trust Company of New York. nrnfl‘ drawn on the principal cities of Europe. A. C. POWELL, casuien. —====DIRECTORS: D, D, COOLEY, V.-Pres, PHILIP POTTER, S C. $. MONTGOMERY, J. rRED FOGER DlflMON BRA o‘flu%&'r‘?of#‘wn =SICOMPLEXIONSE 0. M. CARTER, Pres. L 4 BROWN. ALV SAUNDERS.