Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 11, 1890, Page 5

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— epper has never been able'to get ahead in the world on account of his gambling propen- itios and bis wife aud four little childven THE CONMERCIAL TRAVELER. A Nebraska Man's Schemo Being Developed | by the Eouthern Association. | & GOOD HOTELS Xlow a Chicago Insurance Agent Made a Fortune Out of Railrond Accidents—A Banguet for the Drummers, braska commer inl tourist recently sigrested the plan of having his fellow trav- elers agrecto patronize one hotel in each town of the state, The theory was that such an arvingement would result in the road agents getling bettor accommodations and probubly u reduced rate at the hostelries des ignated “Ihe plan was not ehthasiastically ro- ceived by the Nobrs drummenrs, but their southeri rothers have taken the suggostion larged upon it, and are now enth ¥ pushing the schieme, which has o endorsement of the Southern Tray on. My, Charles I Branan of Atlanta, wan of_ the general hotel at the head of the movement, und loax W here is chair- and is o town ought to have a good hotel s none, let a lo committee bo will put in, suy, o third ora ha i | apital, and let the assoc or pluce bonds for tne rest of the ertaking, but ‘h‘ Soutlern powerful or and ion' is a very angecomplish anization, wonders. It {8 undertaking a fow practical and nece IV is ] oki the rig 8 and the hote 10 beimy Llu o 18 i The iden is for some leading man y town to “wet amoye on him,” to organize at once and huild a hotel. It makes no diffcrence how small the town is, for you can look bac to some of the large and bo ng cities and see the first thing they did was to build a large b 1, and then buila up to the otel. It Paysto Get Hurt. A number of traveling men i front of one of the hotel when the subject of the to the companies came up. an accident that recently occur one of ghe gentlemen siid reports of this veyt o chatting ior oy Spen about od Towa, The published oxpon cidents ? Wi Lun idea of the awfulness of t But they failed to ms opisode, the comical part of which it It be diftieult to do justice to by simply telling of it. A spe train had taken a number of officials and physicians to scene of tho accident. One of the fo whom I will call Mr. Smith, after he had vived, walked up and down between the rows tion littie W the of inju passcngers who had been laid down and wero now being ox- amined by the physiclans. The face of one of them zerly scanned mith. When e had 1y shouted: ‘Mr. 1 them all, uliavan! Mr, rel’ A second a dark obje and }rlm\l.n-d it- ieht in frontof Mr Smith, The latter looked at him for a moment and then ex- claimed: “Ah, there you are, Mr. Sullivan, and thank God, \lnhl]\nml‘ Mr. Sullivan nOW spoke: ‘Yes, sir, it is L Got off pretty this time, There on my forchead—a lit- ateh—worth perhups £200, I'wo hundred dollars ¢ What? Have you not yet got enough#’ repliod Smith. Fhethe called one of the physic and reguested him to carefully examine Sullivan, and the ‘verdict' was thay nothing had happened to Mr. Sullivan. ‘But how about the injury here on my arm? remarked Sulli- van. ‘If yoa mention another word about that arm injury, Smith broke in furiously, “I'll have you arvested for attempted swindling an obtaining money - false pretenses—that's all it is. Our ords show that you received that mjury seven years ago near Columbus. O, you had better keep quiet, my dear Mr, Sullivan,’ and Mr. Sullivan did keep quiet. ‘Sullivan had been a broker in Chicago until about 1576 when he failed. He became a snccessful insurance agent and traveled ex- tensively. In IS5 he wasa passenger on a derailed train and broke a log. That leg cost the company $10,000. From then he was more than successful in his new carcer, and became the terror of all the railroad’ com- panies in the country. He lived from money that he wade out of “railroad uuhjuml He and suc- hmmy he is 'y winuing his cases, worth at least $150,000, Will Banquet the Boys. The business men of Carroll, Ta., have ar- ranged > banquet the traveling men who sit that city, on Saturday next, at Burk's lago number of Omaha grip through western Tow to in the banquetand the fostivitios ont theroto, There Was No doke fn It. ick B. Pewy, o traveling man of Iphia, had some minutes of worry k that would not permit any jocose remurks concerning the cause of his anxiety. He was stopping at the Denison, Cincinuati, and coming from his room about 8 o'clack in the morning with a bundle of soiled clothes, requested to have them sent to a laundry, About an hour afterward Romeo L, Del’uy entered the hotel and walking up to the clerk’s countor lnid down §65 in greenbacks and 1 1,000 dra SWhat's that for? asked the clerk. “It belongs tooue of your guests and we Tound Iho mouey and draft i the tof a inel shirt sent over to our place in Mr. 1 v's bundle.” The elerk took the money, veceipted for it and putit in the safo waiting the owner's When to hours more had gono by g sent $1,065 to a laundry, He went lly to the clerl of the hotel and excit- ked if ho had beard anything, seen anything, or know anything concerning his money o money and draft were turned over 10 him with & jocular remark algut ng ground up in a wash-tub, wieh i , sayving s was oo serious for any slighting Lincoln Drum Morrls Pepper, a tr: twenty-seven years, committe Lincoln on Saturday by drinking er Sulcides. aged have often been in absolute want, weeks ago he left them with only 8 not return until Friday. He hurried up town With a pocketful of money, returning at midnight penniless, & .Iluhlsh morning be- fore breakfust ho left his bome at Tenth and V, and about two hours later was found on the prairio near Scventeenthand Y dying, "An alost empty whisky bottle, o glass and abottle of carbolic acid thres-fourths con- sumed told the story of his method of self- destruction, He was tuken to the police sta- where he lingered in dying agonies for three hours. His wife is left in desti- tute circumstances with four chilaren, the eldest of whom is six s of uge, He Is Not Fanny. Notwithstanding the paragraphists, the drummer is rarely & humorous character, says the Fort Wayne Guzette, Heis apt to be a good fellow, liberal in bis views, with a taste for good stories and a bottomless well for good nature in his heart. Cont: the flinty and uneyen surfaces of life has pol- ished off his points und sandpaperod his odges, and so ho laughs because it is casier | than o cry, and never jokes more gayly than when he i3 in deadliest earnest. He is d hard- working philosopher, and thelife of trade as well as the smoking car. Moreover, it is his business to know the world, and the drumraer is apt to be a profound social philosopher. ’.llm-n are wicked drummers, just us there are with | THE PRIME OBJECT, | 1 ol \ | ren, Shelb; L 9 hysterical clergymen and shift; republicans, but they are a Very small majority. v Atthe Hotels, At the Murray ~Ben Coben, New Orlean $ E Ruebel, Denver; H. B, Whity L, Van Buren, \hm.mm J, N, Kohn, Omaha; ¥, H. Rogers, St. Louis; F,C, Jones, Philadelphia; . 'W. Shepardson New " York; W. H. Laffrey, Leopold,” N J Dy A. E, Bentley, Springfield, E. Morton, Boston; John Pitcher, Tont. nk Lane, New York; w York; P. O, Smith, St. Neb.: W. A, Fister Chicago; x' J. Bower, Chicago; s A. T, 1 burn, Si W, I Denyer; | Dallas Kleh illy cudc . Spauldir and wife, W Rapid City At the J H Hhmmvll Hyn Milwau- | kee; W. I, Hawle; i Geo. B l«\\, Willough Omaha; G. D, Clark ard, Wood | land; C. G, U . Dennis, Towa; . ¥ K and wifo, Junct Hastings, m the Millard. i | il Houston, Al Hardy. Lincoln; | 7 M, Erbly and | wif | Antonio: J. C.' Payatt, Sioux Falls Goodwin, Bristol E. Koch, Chica H. Clark, Omaha; O. R. Gremm Ohio; Oakley Johnson, Ha ¥ , Denve orige A. Oiney, New York: Gi. A! Blaisdell, Chic opee, Ma K Cincinpati; R. AW Omaha; C. At the sark w York; H. n | | ook Y . New York; , Sioux City ;4. € r, Om E. Thou lnm J; levuc, 1ts—H ) ¥, A ksbity, New Yovk; H D. Dbwnen, W 1, Ta D. Mcl Small, Lincoln, Men's Fashion Note: D. Soper, Chicago; M (' lva nd wife, Rock Creck, O, S, K. Shriv ] W. Parsons, New York; I, Brighton, Ont.; J. W. Mor 1. H. Pow : | | R T. K | Elwood; L. Gaines, | L. Hackett, Louisville, Ky.3 W. | Jefferson, Cli Lincoln; | Kilburn, San r, Colo: | rado Sp; 3 ing, Lincoln; W. G. | Clothier and Furnisher: The raincoat i all- r-round ment, although the styles of spring and fall ave followed by the makers now as are the finest tailor-made clothes, The cloth. designs are so successfully worked out in the waterproof fubrie that it is indeed difli- cultto tell the difference. Thereis no more refreshing thought to the well- dressed man nowadays than the contem- ion that he can go about in the rain looking tidy and unsoaked. ot be misled by the pseudo- tions to the effect that ame s garnet, emerald, sapphire and topaz {-pins ave going to be the fashion, In the first place the general plan of the ratterns in neckwear would not harmon- ize with the innovation, and in the sec- ond place these jewels of the gewgaw type would never be tolerated save by s0ns of sporty The gold scarfpins in ball shapes, knots and other quiet designs will con- tinue to prevail, while the bla. \ur\»hlhx pearl will will bo the dominant jewel among the men of swaggerdom. The searfpin is sometimes so striking as to need a dull metal to tone it toan appro- priute gentility. One of the recent novelties is the Ascot bow. Itis ashowy type of made-up but- Y” g- terfly, well consiructed and correctly named. The bow is large enough to have been formed of the Ascot scarfing. © The Windsor scarfs worn with rings of a la variety of materials have come in again with'a rush, and so far as popu- larity is concerned are second to noother style of neckwear current. The latest articles of a fancy season are usually the loudest. In outing goods the newest designs shown in tennis c sashes, and even shirts are in oved stripes fully two inches in width. An outing coat in a wide stripe combi- nation of red and slate is a very fetching arment, In neckwear for the coming there will be a predominance of designs in a quiet tone. Speaking in a general way, it will be indeed dificult to er seloction, in sucha subdued key of rich- ness have silks been we 1. The new London shade s called by the somewh forbidding name of Mi- me It isa very beautiful color ina sort of blue gray, and was suggested by the rising vipois over the marshy spots along the Thames embankment, The gr wd blues and the various intermedidte colors will he the espocial novelties put forward. These shades in background afford some rare opportuni- ties tor unique toning effects, and a very ned display will certainly be made, Upon o bckground in the shade known “iron” ascroll figure in deen maroon regulation gnuhnlr to a light grey*is shown and delicate indeed is the harmoniz- regular shapes wheveln the scurfpin may be seemingly inserted at hazard will have a suceossful fall and winter run, The big i ity, poor memory, difidence, s, ciired by Dr. Miles' \umphb free at Kuhn & Co.'s Loth Voiadihe How India is Governed. A telegram from China says that a de- cree from one of the viceroys imposing a upon opium has been abandoned be- wse of the protests of Great Britain, wys tie Now York Herald. The British government holds amonop- oly of the opium crop in India. Under this opium is sold to middlemen at a profit of 600 per cent. It isthen taken to China, but the Chinese are permittod to impose only a nominal te Eng holds it as a British interest in Ind and insists that it shall be so received in China. The revenue from this monopoly varies from $45,000,000 to $54,000,000 @ year, and without it England could not yovern India, Of course the opium habit is ruinging China, But India must be governced. And while England names her own tax upon opium us a monopoly China is bound to buy it and impose only the rev- enue which Enlandg approves. nl L L S. R l‘l(!nn dentist, has removed to Commercial National bank building. ——— A Convertto Brown-Nequar Paris gossips declare that one of the regular physicians who wus most cone spieuous in ridiculing Dr, quard’sg*elixit” has just b paralysis by its administrat now us zealous an advocate of Sequard as he was previously a scoffer, 1602 Sixteenth and Farnam streets {s the new Rock Island ticket office, Tick= eta to all points east at lowest rates | the'energy of the oflicers A DEADLY DUELIN THE DARK, Officer aud Outlaw Shooting By the Flash of Their Firearms, HE FOUGHT LIKE A VERY DEMON. With a Load of Buckshot in His Body Noratto Ponce. a California Des- perado Held His Pursuers at Bay. The tale of adventure here ret down written expressly for the San Fran- Examiner by Harry Morse, the imous of western sheriffs and de- rtives, and is a striking illustration of ifornia life only a decade since: One of the most thrilling adventures T ever experienced wus an encounter with a Chileno murderer named Noratto Ponce while I was ff of Alameda county in 1867. At that time the county was thickly settled with desperate cl ters who had for years terrorized the locality where they held forth by thei criminal 4 y anything and life took y Wi risco most te she were not averse king human when the opportunity offered. It vsof work to rid the county of the desy s, who were mostly Mex- icans and Chilenos, and occasionally a white scoundrel, but I finally succeeded. Among the wretches who caused me the most anxiety was Noratto Ponce. This fellow was one of the most fiendish cut-throats that ever drew the breath of ses or yus ho would 1d Do was also cunning enough to arvangs matters so that the officers of the found it impossible to secure evidence that would send him to the galiows. Likeall men of his cali- ber, however, he finally overrcached himsell. his bre THE On_Septem d a man n KILLING OF JOY. Ponco ned Joy, in a aywards. Affer committing Ponce escaped m\.n the mountainons ¢ and at one time it looked as thou was going to slip through our | On & certuin Friday in November of that mur- o, ut he crime Hills, the Livermor year, howe accompinicd by Ofl John Conway of Ouakland, T set out for Alisal, Murray township, There wo left buggy and pro on horsback to the vicinity in which the Chileno was supposed to be in hiding, A Mexican hadinformed me that Ponco wanted to en; services to guide him out of thec ry, and that he (the Mexican) w to deliver the bandit into m, .~ The plan we agreed upon w my informant should lead Ponce down a by-road pas- | sing by the Livermore House and enter the main‘road by a certain gate, on the. other side of which myself and Conwny would be ready to receive them. They 2 to arrive ut the spot late on a Fri- day night, and as the nights at that se son were very dark, I told my Me: to wear a white cont that would be dis- tinguished in the blackness, so there would be 1o danger of him receiving a bullet intended for the Chileno, A PLAN MISCARRIES. At the appointed hour ed tothe spot. A few yar gate through which the two men An vere to pass, forming an avenue through which Ponce must ride, were stacked two lurge piles of hay. Conway con- cealed { inthe hay at the end toward :hwe reckoned the Chileno would appear, and [ se- creted mysell at the other end, We calculated that the men would pass Conway, who would then step into the road and cover their retreat, and while the hay would cut off escape on both sides, T would block their passage forward. It was several hours after we took our positions when they put in an appearance, and, to my chagrin, they were coming from a direction opposite the one by which we expected them, 1 alone saw them coming, and realized thatas Conway was looking for them to arvive the other way he would be taken by surprise and Porce would probably not be caught in the trap we set. I was lying flat on the ground, and the Mex- ican’s white coat was all I could see in the inky darkness. I concluded to play a lone hand, so I rolled over and over on the ground until I had placed mysel di- reetly in the path of the riders, THE DUEL IN TiL NIGYIT, ‘When they got within close shooting distance I, still lying on the ground, cried: “ialt,” l'\whln‘l\ the white aun to fade away, The Mexican was riding out of bullet rang No sooner had I announced |n\~x-lf than [ saw something glisten like steel, and I realized that the Chileno’s hooter was in his hand ready for business, | v it moving away, and knowing that Ponce was escaping, 1let drivea Load of buckshot in the divection. There was a yell, the shining weapon in his hand de- cended and I heard the thud as the ban- dit struck the ground. Thinking I had killed him I was about to rise and spring forward when there was a flash followed by aveport and a bullet whistled past me. ently there was life in him ye I blazed away at the place where 1 secn his pistol flash, but missed him, Another bullet from his pistol flew by me, This duel in the dark, cach man aiming at the flash of the other’s weapon, was continued until the Chil- eno'’s ammunition was exhausted. THE CHILENO'S AY ‘When his fire ceasea I ran towards him. Therestood his horse, but Ponce had disuppeared. Conway having joined me by this tim commcl need 4 Near by was a_hay which we thought he might bflvnn( led, s0 wo fired it and had plenty of light, but it failed to reveal the bandit. When ¢ light came we found in the g ened by the recent rains, the t his high-heeled boots, . I secur vices of eight or ten Me we searched up towards the hills All we found was Ponce’s cont com- p! y riddled with buckshot and sat- urated with blood, showing that the load I d must have taken effect, Halfa mile from where the coat was found we picked up his boots and the trail ended, s his stocking feet left no mark We did not see how it was pos- sible for Ponce to live with lhu wounds that he must have received, WO S 1ed for his dead body a lmvr,: time without success, Afterwards [ learned that while we were standing on the bank of a ereelk the murderer was concealed in the bushes about twenty feet from my party. Thinking discovery was cortain he tried to draw a bead on me, but his ario was so badly mangled that he could not raise his pistol. NTHE TRACK AGAIN, ernor Low 500 on the head of the hml the effect of arousing and exciting of Mexican desperadoes, icans and had ut- the cupidity of whom would | many vesent thoir parents to the gallows for less than halt of that sum, During the it week in December, 1867, 1 1 ved @ lotter from Sherift Classen of Contra Costa county to the effect that if [ would go to Martinez he would give me in. formation concerning the whereabout of Ponce. From whit Classen told me [ deemed it necessary to proceed ta An- tioch and cross from there to Collins yille, where it derer was conceal Deputy Sheriff Swain of Contra Costa !Hfllv r Conw of O W, Iwent och, where it was ascertalned nee wis was concenled Mount Diablo. Leandro im” horses to more valley. Wearrived in the c at about 11 o'clock' 0 Thursday 1 Upen reaching the house where Ponce was supposed to be concealed wo sur rounded it and waited for daylight to ar- rive. Atdawn we reached the house but found no tra {he * Hisdaner, not in We m Ne Black Hills, back of 1 Riggs’ canyon returned to n thore went on saddlo o of While sounding the hills we came upon who, under pressure divalged the fact that Ponce was some- where in Pinole. Starting on the Sun- day morning following from Martines, we went toward P searching all the houses on the road. DEATH FINDS HIM, As we ed in r. mt of the house of one Jose Ryjos we man climbi the mountain side \\\‘ a bundle under his arm and the incv sle shotgrun thrown over his sloulder. Thinking thatit mightbe our man I told Swain and Conway to guard the house, allow- ing no person toleave from it while went after the man on the hillside I was toiling up the hill Swain entered the house while Conway waited outsic As the deputy sherifl opened the door board in the floor was thrown up a Ponee leaped forth, pistol in Swuin _jumped back out of Ihv houso and eried, ohn, he's here,” as the bandit rushed ®ut 1 acks for the ereck, to do which he 1 to come direction. Ho did not sce me, vy and as the bullets flitted by an old spanincd, Swain and Conway we making things i resting for him, Ponce made won- derfuy tin Between myself and the outlaw was a_ravine, so I dismounted and clambered down to the side of the creek opposite him. Then he saw me, and turning plunged into the thick growth of willows the willows move , and Con and nd I from my »lm the dex I We could see {e made his way wain from their oured lead into s cornerel, Dushes, ind v it he determined if possi: ble to t > with him into the other world. So pped baldly forth from the bushes where I would shot at himand where he at the s #ime had me for a target, The Chilen it hand had been shot through, so he was compelled toshoot with his left. e had his six-shooter resting on his right wrist and T had my weapon at my side. As he raised his right arm, with the weapon resting on it, I brought my Henry cavbine to a hovizontal, 1 knewit was a question of who got the drop on the other first, so, taking a quic im, I fired. The nnlwu( the bandit dropped to his side and he staggered, but ll\ll not fall. He stood thero like a statue for brief moment, and then tried to raise his pistol again, The effort was a failure. Ponce’s knees gave way under him and hedropped in o heap on the ground, dead. My bullet had penetrated his ab- domen, get o good Fits, spasms, St. Vitus dance, nervousness and hysteria aro soom cured by Dr. Miles' Nervirie, Free sumpless at Kuhu & Co., 1ith and Douglas, e erod Heart ac situated on St. . 18 an iomy for day Mary’s avenuo institution devoted to themoral and intellectual education of young girls, The courseincludes every- thing from an elemce vy department to a finished claissical education, Besides the ordinary academical course, music, painting, drawing and the languages ave taught. French is included in the ovdi- nary course. Differenceof religion isno obsiacle to the receiving of pupils, pro- vided tney conform to the genes lations of the school. Tho 3 term commences the first Tuesday in September, Classes begin ot 9 o, m., and pupils are dismissed at 330 p, m. = Tickets at Lowest r: accommodations via the great Rock Is- land route- Ticket office, 1602—Six- eenthand Farnam streets, Omaha. mEC T WANTED TO DIE, Louis Styeh, Blind and Bleed o Deat At 20’clock the other afternoon Ofi- cer Sum Alden of Sanfrancisco, found Louis Styeh, a negro, looking at his life blood flow from two ghastly wounds on each wrist, at Ger'slodging-house at the southeast corner of Stockton and Pacifie and _superior Poor, Tried to s ys the Chronicle. The man was taken to the ving hospital. veh was a ool on the steamer Aus- February 13th last was at he had trouble with went ashore and on go- s assailed by four of his men, waited for him in the dark. Hel inally gone through the world with only one , but when the quartet of assiilants had finished with him he was i sightless and the gall snw him no more, Deop insult was udded to bratal injury \\l\t'ullw was arrvested for assault and tuken ashore, going to the Queen’s los- pital, where he remained two months. Ther'o was no hope for: Lim and he finll y dl'll’l: :d to San Francisdoy,but being blind he could get_no emplopment and his soon disappeared, leaving him on e of sturvation, As a last re- resort he secured a razor and slashed himself ac , sovering the When discovered he was hold- is hands over abasin, fearful of shing blood over the furniture, and dding his best to die with dispateh. *I will makea better jobof itnext time,” he said doggedly s he was being con- veyed to, the Iu pital. ing b - — " Patcnts, Protect your invention; nt; secure your make your fortune; consultation Omnha Patent Ageney, Crounse block, cor, 16th and Capital ave.,Omuha, Neb. Just after the war ended the partment gave Fricsson a 15-inch found among the ruins of Sumter, had been fired from one of the monitors, d somehow the fuse had failed to go off. Ericsson sent it to the king of Sweden, und the good Oscar placed it in the great museum ut Stockholm with a fitting and touching inscriptionin honov of one of the most honored of Swedes, It's there now. v de- shell 1t e The only r train out of Omaha run expressly for the accommodation of Omaha, Council Bluffs, Des Moines and Chicago business is the Rock Island vestibule limited, leaving Omaha at 4:1 p. m. daily, Ticketoftice 1602, Sixte ilroad and Farnim sts,, Omaha. - The Male and the Editor. A Georgia editor, says the Atlanta Constitution, borrowed & mule to plow his garden, When quiet was restored the editor was found nnder an outhouse, four panels of fence were gone and the mule was eating roasting ears ina neigh- hrough conches—Huliman palace sleepers, dining cars, free reelining chair rs to Chicago and intervening points via the great Rock Island route, Licket office 1602, Sixteenth and Farnum. s thought the mur- | Accompanied by | at Collinsville, but | near | SUBMARINE TOPEDOES, They Dodge Unseen Around a 0 Despite Electric Seaveh Lights, The Spanish submarine torpedo boat, the I L which has .n\v)\lh\l ' and illustrated heretofore in the New York Sun, has recently complotedalong series | oftesis to which the Spanish goverr ment compelled its inventor tosubmit | itbefore its final accaptar says that paper. Thesetrials have been made at intervals for sev weeks past, and in- cluded experiments ¢ durance under wate cuse of control, and neeted with the hoat., T s to the speed, en- radius of action, other matiers con= practical value of the 10y concluded with the severest test of all, o sham contest with the cruiser Colon, one of the largest, newest and swiftest vessels of the Spanish navy, sufd to bea falr samplie of the war ships of the present ti me, The fivst trial of this sort was inthe time in tho open sea off Cadiz, with ather & rough thut most of those who boats towituess the mide seasick, The Peral failed in this test, those Colon being ablo to lowate narino v a considerable and to kkeep out of the s the wentout in other tests were ssol at speed of the Colon much excocding that of the Peral. Thesame night the test was repeated, and with exactly ( results. Although the Colon” us erful e ic search ligh modern conti for det approach of toporedo Peral, *with only obs fon tower ‘m\'- passed all around the Colon detected, approaching within the big el without heing d The little submarine boat e« blown the cruiser out of the dozen times without trouble to itself had the contest been areal The search lwnL\\u.m Lto heentively useloss in picking out so small an object amidthe wa Onthe mitteo Lieute hof this trial the com- onducting the tests has notified hatit will report fi nee of his we paringa roport of sets out the defi- clences whichuse has developed in his I i having them cor- rected inother ve of the which he hopes will bo built. sume ty pe Th said to be the first time that a submarvine v s undergone an ac- tual test in theoy en under conditions approaching those of actual war. nervous- by Dr. Miles' N E Kuln & Co.’s, 15th und Do Condensed actical but inarvtistic German s made upn compound of sugar and condensed milk and tea, from which a cup of tea can be had by simply pouring on boiling wite Do not be imposed o1 by any of the mumerous tmitations, substitue, ete, whith aro flooding theworld, There is only one Swift's Specific, and ther is nothing ke It Our remedy cone talus no Meraury, Potash, Arecrlc, or any pois- ©onous substance whatever, It builds upthe gen- enl health frm the first dose, and has mever falled tocradicate contaglons blood polson and itseffects from the system. Be sure (o get the genine. Seod your addices for onr Treatiseon Bhod anl Skin Discases, which will bo tgiled fie SWIPT SPECTFICON Ao PRINTERS INK. A JOURNAL FOR ADVERTISERS. Ts lumod weokly, and 1 the reprosextative purnal ~tho trads fournl of Ameri n tadioais £0 o Snurpericaced atrortian how, whos, 1od vhoro bo shsld advertiso; Bow to wite aa sdverisoment; hovta dirplay ote; what newrpapen 1 ma; bov much momy o pend-ln fu, dls toursn om erory point that aimits of pnltably discunion, Advertising Is a3 urt 4 by magy bot wdoratiod by fow. The sductys of IRINT- 25" INE uderstnd 14, aad thofr adrico It based o an experisace ¢ mot than trontrdvo yiars & Dennersmwku teru DENVER, COLO.. Capital Prize - $7,500, TICKETS 50 OENTS EACH. $20,370 PAID EACH MONTH, BANK OF COMMERCE PAYS ALL PRIZES, Address B. F. RHODUS, DeNVER, - - - CoLoraDO, JOSEPH GILLOTT'S STEEL PERNS. GOL.D MEDAL, PARI3 EXPOSITION, 1880, THEMOST PERFERT OF PENS. DRE. . WESTS NERVE AND BRAIN TREATMENT. 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Ao ENDEDL A AMENDES MENDED, B3 HI! vv On payment of the first monthly volumes of the Encycic mediately, The country inthe world; remaining fiye within four months; thus by the time you have half dollars you will come into posse and will be receiving THIS Do you FIRST. installment you will v o volumes of the BIEE every day into the bargain, know whatthe Americ: anized 1 neyelopedin Britannica is? Itisalibraryof the choicest, most useful and most entertaining reading on an almost infinite varicty of subjects. 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It mukes no difference what fact you want to verify, what allusion you wantto understand, the Americanized Eneyclopmdia Britannica will tell you all about it ata moment’s notice. THIRD. tains ninety one of th rou X ne States and H, It isoncof the best Atlases that can be bought for money. id beautifully executed maps, including o now map of ev Territories of the Union. Itis a perfoct Biograph al Index, It con= ery You can turn to it with per- fect confidenco forfull particulars of thelite of any man of note down vo the pres ent year, 1890, Why Americanized Encyclopedia Britannica? ni Beed terest to Englishmen. > that name desc 1-latest edition—remodeled so as to fit it for Ameri “Britannica” was compiled by Englishmen for the use of Englishmen “Americinized Britannica” has been rear Americans. eribes it accurately, It is the Encyelopodia home: nized 2ans. 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