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PART THREE. 'IWHE OMAHA fSUNDAY BEE PAGES 17 TO 20, TWENTIETH YEAR, OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING A APRIL 26, 1 “WILL BE PLACED ON THE MARKET TO-MORRO — — e 7 1 TR 1 T e TR o T | 3 g 3 | A ligas [T ‘ 2 | | 28 | 3 [ | 3 (B | s 3 S SR S e ‘ | 27| Frg g [ om | I | b 2y | it | | | 4 Ty e 27 ISR e | 4 2] 4 3| ' | 6 | o | 26 L %6 (E%p [ l s ‘ use 5 o e S \ | 6 2§ [ | Il 2 l 6 25 L) | | | - | o | I | $ 24 9 7 | 2 [ ] e £ e e T R | 7 24 | | ] 23 | g (ot e | a [srs B |2 ® [y e | | 23 |16 8 |8 | [ olmes o i 5 ‘ | © | | ®1 . ® | —ADDITION TO— [ — 8 | & 22 [ ek e I [~ R e (L S0 2 i coho i) et S ‘ | RN 3 | 2t | TS o | o) a1 e 21 |5 16 [t | SO | 10 =2 ‘ o T | T | g0 | e | F 1\sT O‘, ‘H ,\ | 1 (. 20 ‘ 1 | IO | iy | T 12 19 | 19 | a2 4 4. « L Re 19 G R 12 [ | e T [ e e 118 18 il 8 | |1 | ' 18 (18 TS | 17 | ST =y | R ! 17 2L i [T | i T | 17 | 14 s 14 [ | 16 T Tei|L [T 16 T e T \ 16 15 16 s | PR Y AL o} s el e D U ) _ ad i e s 3 i | i Al . “Q ‘ a4 i W e AR ke e X ‘ | 30 | 7k f | i 0N e T D | 1 i 30 15 1 30 [ 30 1 30 | e | { 29 am TET T | 2 ol e 29 2 20 2 20 | 2 20 2 29 2 3 | 28 3 | = 28 3 28 3 | | 28 LR | 2 o | 28 3 28 3 | | [ 71 Tl e | mal i | [ (e o O S |27 4 70 % | | TS 5 | 26 T 26 | 5 [RaLe 5 [ 26 5 | 26 SR 26 ST | 26 e ! | 23 4] TG | | ‘S‘ o 2| j 2 2 pet i 6 i | 6 | A 7. 2 Al S e BT w 24 7 | | S 5 L & (il = —(12 & —13 s | | ER] [ 8 | 2 L e |9 28 [ ST | ACOH S G| E 8 8 | § £ ol | 7 G| T @ = gl e v s | g [ 54 . | S| = —{ |- S S e S ol ) Sl ) btes) | g -3 S | [ | | % 5 £ 21 10 IO = | iy = [y f o » AT S TS | 1o | 20 11 T 20 11 | 20 11 20 11 20 It [ 20 It | ] o ) 12 ! 19 12 19 12 19 T2 R Y T3 } T T B 13 I 13 s e | 13 TR e | =l ) Al N i v ) 8 7 & i —16 15 [#1e 15 16 e e T R |16 | el “I)" | the manufacturing cen« 4 *'om the Postoffice, AdJ oins on the South. . ter of East Omaha. e EAST OMAHA LAND CO'’S. PROPERTY|u:zzz I This property joins East Omaha on the north; is only two and ation, and five other enterprises will begin the construction of their _ Prices on our new addition to East Omuha will range from three-fourths miles from the Omaha postoffice, and one mile from buildings within the next few weeks, so that altogether twelve in- " $325 to §375 per lot. Terms, about one-third cash; a part of the res the manufacturing center of East Omaha. aje located in East Omaha and others will soon follow. mainder within one year, and the balance on or before three yearg This addition comprises eighty acres of the finest land in or manufacturing town s started and-growing rapidly and at 7 per cent annual interest Every lot sold in this addition” will around East Omaha, every acre of it 1s high and level, consequently realty values in the locality cannot” help but increase correspond- ~ be accompanied by a complete abstract showing good title, and will every lot in the addition iS a good one. The big contract for grading ingly fast. A ; g bear a certificate of one of the best abstract firms in the city. strects in East Omaha is being pushed with a large force of men; Lo- Purchasers f’f lots in S_”“fh Omaha when the town started a For further information call on or address cust avenue is being prepared for the building of the motor line, few years ago made large profits on their investments: so will pur- : i : : POT EORG . seven of the manufacturing ind ustries located in East Omaha chasers of property in Last Omaha make safe and profitable invest- gE‘?/ &CGr 16th Ear?do ll\:'AaF:“fi:]r: Sie already have their buildings ere cted, and most of them are in oper— ments if they buy now, they cannot help it. . . Cor. b No ceremony was | killed, but scarcely had the girl stepped into | I AN N body and rushing toward the nearest engine | speak, tha cistern at Fourtee n m?u‘\‘mrl‘ n':‘m‘,} oak | the light of the burning building, whea DUOM OF THL (;R“\\D ClL\TR'\L. velled: “How do you think those wen can | which was being filled by No. — . ‘ ith an Farnam | then another in close proximity. . They had THE HATFIELD-M'COY FEUD, | hiivfecd ineouc . , b 1% X fndood | Bied togethor, - ion, Rrom c2nd siubo W : rious| vored to kill som il Anse” and Ellison Mounts fived two put out a fire with the wind in the hose " willing hands manned the brakes. The sup- | bones of one man and the pelvis of another, body. Very little powder was thrown aw Winchester builets into her heart. She sank s That settled it. Into it the engineer shot | ply of hose 2d only to the alley south of | Then they came across atother fraginent of and when the engagement ended there was a | forward dead on the doorstep and —the the water. The inert hose became a thing of | the Grand Central. There, upon a platform | humanity ana lying beside it was @ collare Vacant seat in the boat's crew. But Anse | body was burned with the building. At the | 8saled by a Candle at ths Top of the Eleva- | life. Itsquivmedlikea reptile. It bulged | of large dr; ! 1 dered that ho had broke even, for Ran- me moment the rifies of Bud aud his father Shafl like a chord in the muscle of a giant. Its | and directed the stream from the squirt gun | missing men. In all that remained of favorite son was kuown to be lying a k and Jim Vance got a bullet in tor fhaft, vitality in. ! short distance up the Kentucky mountains | his brain, But the others got bebind trees men. It sta; their progress. No half a | as well have tried to dampen the coals of | John Lee. The time-plece bad escaped ine with balf of his head shot off. and calmly waited until the family should b dozen humans could pull that mighty writh- | hades, {RhaLen b ok: (o plooafliad) excari i 2 News that Sumter was _ taken | forcea from the doomed house. A ten-ye: NEBRASKA'S GREATEST FUNERAL PYRE, | ing massup around all those curves, Still The Bluffs City worked at Thirteenth and The cl d remains were borne to the & HOW ELLISON MOUNTS WAS HANGED | arn wac' ™ tom ™" evis " ‘4 | £E1 S of ngu s St 01 ot G g : A i goods boxes, the pipemen stood | button of William McNamara, one of the Thrilling Tnoidents in Connection with the Famous Family Vendetta, ased until it reached the pipe- | into the dining room furnace. They might | pocket of another was found the watch of : the fire was burning. The rafters of thoe | Harney streets und rendered valuable ser- | undertaking rooms of John Jucobs. south instead of “‘Abolition Abe,” us Lincoln | the back door and try to eéscape. The dosis mansard were succumbing. The roof was | vice in filling the cisterns near the hotel | T acaust cast a cloud over was commonly known among the slave-owners | child had scarcely made his appearance when s | fallig in. Countless myr! 5 was almost _entirely sus. Reminisce ces of an Omaha Nows- | of that community, produced @ temporary | he was shot down. The roof was now falling | Some of the Steps Which Led Up ks were regvetfully 1 imon consent the town wend ds of golden | from which the others fed. the city aving as if certain | The structure was doomed. The streams | pended. cac wand the moiher was told to run for the the fate of the structure was secaled, | witkin had no effect upon the flames. It was | into mourniug, and when, two days later, the paper Man who Witnessed the P When we whip the Yanks we will settle | forest while the son and father covared her to Its mation and Some ie tangle of the hose was unraveled and | useless therefore, to expect that thoso with- | heroes ware laid away, on a diy of sunihing ecution and Read the this hog matter,” explained Anse Hatfield to | retreat with their guns. She lived to take of the Mea Who Sur- dilatory water was at length cast upon the | out could stay its progress, _ Frequently, | which could not dispell the funereal of o - a McCoy slave who had veen sent to receive | ten steps when a balf dozen bullets SR flumes. Then came another, another and an- | they could not mount to the desired altitude. | thousands of hearts, thtre was not a business Death Warrant. the peace message, and andall replied that | pierced ~ her body. At the [ other stream, Then one of them ceased for- | When they did, however, it was only to glis- | house in Omaba which wasn't hung in e Rab La b nout batac moment father and _ son sprang cver. Tnen came a crash. The roof had | ten for a moment like diamonds, the next v Sk % after tho war there was | from their home, ‘Aring as: they au. | ior kot i fallen in. Beneath it dropped the top floor. | moment to be reduced to vapor in the fur- s @ solemn procession which lofy Recently Tur Bee's telegraph columns | only an occ killing among the two | moment it looked as if both wculd reach the | The antumn of 1878 was one of the most | Soon the mext floor resigned itself to the | nace beneath, art of the city. At the head marched Nume; hots were exchanged | shelter of the woods, when suddenly a riflo || beautiful experienced in this tion of the | flames, The han upon the third floor rested all | Befory st o co, Mayor Wilber. s BaRle SlRED . colmns g pon ird floor v [ fore the flrst crash took place, a half | Muyor Wilber. f hé vemains of four of the : ucross Tug river. Every y aw two | .ball struck Bua and be fell dead. || country. As bad not been the case for sever- | the coals which had done_their work avove. | dozen doves who had made themselves a, | victims woro lsid in Prospect Hill comotery, clusion of the famous McCoy-Hatfield fued, | o™ " (70 F VG Y00 vost (01 {RR ALY TAlapo: al years previously, the season opened with | , Meauwhile firemen, civilians, busybodies | home i the northeast corner of the building: | Poor McNamdra was intorred 1n Holy Sepe which for three decades was waged With | us @ alt of the quarrel But | Randan MeCoy alone ) 3 took a hand at the hose. Some were moved | circled about as if impatient of the disturb | ulchr escaped, and though ' qyy warm days, and nights of almost Italian | by curios terrioly wounded reached a neighbor's o Y y_curiosit, terrioly wounded - reachod 8 o "EPPONS | milduess. After the worry and fatigues of | still by duty! 4 = el aTs . | house. L) 2, bo A MENOLE T ER Sday peole n their doorste) d en- | overcome t which have originated throughout the south | With the importance “" ;’“;'Ll“‘k ur | struggling in the throes of death when | the day, people sat in their doorsteps and en L during the present century none have been | JCrs dud continuing the vendetta, Vil | SDevil Anse? Hatfield walked far authorities made no effort to interfere for the such bloody results in the mountains of | auother generation was approaching others by daring and others | ance and as if anxious to retire. When the | Jonu Lee, one of the unfortunate eastern Kentucky. Of the many vendettas | and the ma w thoroughly impressed Now and then & brave lad, | roof fell, however, they took wing and were | member of No. — and worked for Morse, the heat or gases or overexertion | secu no more. r, who was then in business on d, and | joyed the cooling broézes and the rest and :\'r!\‘il«;}"vl:lxc: me;ome'um;-‘r\m,uall,\- lru\"u _ Succeeding the crash, came the overturn- | Dodee immediately onposite the court house, » conducted with such unrelenting fiercencss d ) effort to interfere for the | picking the little fellow up in his avms coolly | quict of ideal nignts. Q0NN A0 hus the fight contiuued | ing of the fire cistern on the upper tloor. Heary Lockfelt was a member of the same sted w o rele % ceness | very good reasons that bo! nilies were g t many of the men remaining in dangerous po, | This was e Had it been full of water, | compay and wi loye of Irvin & El- o ; tossed him into the glowing embers. The ses foweth g i nenr | x \ [ This was empty. Had it been full of water, | compaty and was an employe o n & El or productive of more heinous crimes than | powers in the politics of their respective | “"BUY patgall’ MeCoy was not yet cowed, | Lhe season, however. had not far advanced | sitions, especinlly those who fought tne | it might have saved somo of the structure, | Jis then in the hardware business. the one just ended. Moro than @ score of | counties, and those who were not naturally | go'ohtiined from Governor Buckner war- | 'Yhen on oneof the most lovely of nights, | flames in the dining room. At length down was & th b { the leaders, were Omal f 1 d of | upou them camo the uppor floor and down, | pesition D TR T AR TR ves sacrifio i ess on- | i1 SYmpathy with one of the leaders, Were | puntg for the arrest ; of tno | Omuba expericncedaloss of thousands of | Upon t me the upper floor un + | position on the fifth floor, as it did also un- vo wazon for Havris & Iisher, gém‘lc‘:::ll‘)nnd‘:::l‘:'::»nlm‘:-m‘i?:m bitternoss ou- | easily Induced to remain passive through | fiirdorers ” of - bis . fakily | and | dollars, n woalth of human Iife which, wil down it e cellar, by dogrees went three | other fireman named Joannes. Theso gentle- | meat firm which exists no longo \ s s | foar. with o determined posse of Ken- | long bo lumented. In the starlight,smokewas | Ptfied and charred remains never more 1o | men would have lost their lives had it not m McNamara was the only membor fmplicated were almost anuibilated. The Acme of Atrocity. tuckians a mvaded West Virginia. The | scen issuing from the mansard roof of the | Jo FecoBuized on carth by friend or love 1 for the present Sheriff Boyd and Gecrze He was engineer of the Grand Origin of the Feud. ~Theaay ol tho prosidential —eicetion—of | Hatfields were ready fov the affray and an | Graud Central hotel. 'By sunriso the next s | tL who drageed botb of them from their | Central hotel. He suggested in the begine The origin of the bloody family war ante- | 1x50, withessed the most atrocious act of the | €ngagement in which several fell on epch side | morning the great hos lay fu ruins and | Without, a throng surrounded the pyreon | dangerous positions. Other willing hands | ning of the engogement that water be shob brave firemen—voluiiteer firemen.—had | Farnam and Fourteenth streets, The en- endered their lives in the mammoth | Kines rattied industriously, out only when vas | pyre. they had_water with which to assault the | whe {h: At the time Omaha had reached the era of | flames. When that necessary fluid gave out, Both McNamara & Lucas are d objected because that would injure his 1 | ouly three story . brick buildings | they stood motionless like beautiful mortald their asphyxiated frieuds survived, His objection perhaps caused him to ry 18 of Inst' yoar, sur- | though the high school, the Union Pacific | ftom whom tho spari of life has departed | Louis Faist Is now as he was then, & mower, | lose eyerything their personal differences to ealist in the | the deacon to pic dates the fall of Sumter. The disposition to | entire feud, Bob, Frank,and Randolph, jr., of | followed their meeting. = To the great satis- | fiv commit murder by the wholesale, however, | the McCoys crossed the river and intercepted ""‘.““("‘“f i -fi“l]l .}lk-l“w:\‘,]lu:l\Jlfln“)‘\‘l‘mnh. o did ot develop thorougbly until after the | \'Deacon” Hatfleld,so called on nccount of the | 0ne of those whohad kiliéd his gt 8h.y fact that he had onte attended divine services | captured. Ihe old man insisted t south had lost, us all male members of both at somo remote time and ‘professed” reli- | Stoula be taken to Pikeville, Ky., and t families, by mutual consent, had buried | gion. While the boys woreengaged in hacking | He wus hung Febry co and the inser rried to the saloon of B. Davenport is through the stand pipes and all the floors flooded, which would certainly have had some located | beneficial effeet. Tue tiling coatractor, how- ; 1ng Feb AR sl i SCDIEH A g d | forever, A thousand tongues voiced the re- | of beards,and none the worse for his thrilling Vi thelr | Tounded by the friends of the McCoy’s who | headquarters and the Grand Central clamed | foF A thousund tong ards, 30 ¢ | Lon Randall was the fourth member of No. 1 e Sgah R vl of o | stood with ¢ rifles during the oxceution | greater altitude, the [ast-mentioned cquailing | Eret of the sorrowing citizen. A thousand ience. i : LT S bt T R (e T S Gause. But tho surrender of Leo saw tho | Bastiiid Was BCrELLL D e prisonars, | 10 ropel aby attempt on tho part of the HAt: | Ji every way tho lirgest hostelry of the | luost tearful eyes exprossed & sorrow which | * Al Hartly, ono of tho pipemen of No, g, | % aud worlked for "Charley Goodrieh, now Hatfields and McCoys industriously pre- fong and they were inads prisonats. | g 510 rescus. the conaemned: | Of the R words could not describe, lost control of his stream, and was dnshed | g vatail toy store on Farnam stroel oppos paring to carry on the war on a smaller scale, \ches 0f an oak and the youug | Muny executions which occurred on both | © The totel had been closed for several ly, nothing was left but bare and | down a flight of steps. He watked like a | o tho Boyil The McCoys occupled large farms on the Were tried “Devii Anse | Sides during the thirty years the foud exist- | weeks, ge Thrall having retived, The | ragged wlls. The glory of Omaha's host lunatic to the ofice of Dr. Dinsmoor, where | *'fathe e o L an on e ; S te sod of | €d, this wus the oaly one haviug legul sanc- | Kitchén brothers, James, Charles, and | had departed. The genius of the Gate Bliss store is now on Faram street, 8nd it | qppimaoty sto e olilef Lbitiot Nka extremo castern boundary of Kentucky,while | was chics justice. The jury was composed o } K ors, 3 , and | had entus of | ¥ [Slarais irtecnth street, was chief of th ! : } i, Chirloy” Gillesnie Bilison | tion. Dicks,” as everybody knew him, now, alas! | wept and could not be comforted. was thought R R el immediately beyond 1 West Virginia, the | Captain Hatficld, Charley Gillespie, Bllison e wiltae i Roton ot PURIS R |t (b4 i Taame the A e < ded Lo R e artment. But 'he had 1 ¥ Momts. Jim Hobineon. SOIA" Jim’ Vanee | The writer of this sketeh, now a member | removed by death, having secured the leas to that quiet night wero crowded hosts 4 Sh o L L TR Hatfields were located. Both families were | 31 ) 1 of Tuk Bre stafl, wus @ witness to this last | The place was in the bauds of the painter | of incidents which have gone down into le rip, aud for m pio then | ] ; Tom Adams and 4 number of others who had X | [ rucy Shennon, a character in his day, wealthy in lands, slaves and cattle, their [ i QGRS AVE L that time i shoot | 8¢t in the feud, and stood at the sido of the | and upholsterer, whom tho new lessees had | history, und some which have never bo ; v years an enthusiastic struck with o plauk and in- firman, Wi and a member of the council, commanded ; 50 property interests being separated by Tug | i "{7iVed Statos revenue ofcials who w illiterate country preacher who offered conso- | given orders to furnigh and decorate it in | given the immortality of print. Some of the | jured. 110 bhie fivo A dipalios comm]tias bt the dauns nver, & siuggish stream which empties | % a0t P e EON I B ion to the condemued ma in bis dying mo- | keoping with the hotbl}in which every lead: | uctors in the weird spectacle ave dead, Some | Charles Withnell, Charles Florio and John | (i} {ie S5 4 patice comimittee of the couns its waters near the source of the Big Sandy. | Stiffs L] it ments, The writer was the only man in the | ing Omahan had a peeuniary inte and | are dying,and others still fondly, like ivy toa | Ralph were also bruise A0SR IS e R A o iyl The periodical spring rise permitted smali | *“7y% ¢ a1 was not to determine the guilt or | PArty who could read and in tho_absence of | every more humble Qmaban u local pride. ing to the memorivs which ouly death The miraculous escape, however, was 5 y g steamers to make their way into the moun 18 SER) RS HOR & i Vi e all the rul was o ent chief of the fire department, The evening of September 4 of the ye can dissipute, that of Willium Henry ( th warrant, mentioned, from the heart of town to the'cou- | The G entral would never have | the pre fines almost of Donglas county, the news | burned had there been a man on hand with a | immense cornice and facade on the east ¢ 1 that the structure was on fire. How | bucket of water when the flames originated, | trance, bringing with it hundreds of bric atastrophe oceurred, nobody knows. It | It would never have burned had the pipemen | fell, béaring Galligan on to ths ground. )—Tut | was known, how that the flam bocn able to reach the flames before th He was immediately carried to Ish's drug the steriff who had been hurt in tho skir- tain fastuess, and in this manner the sur. | (a0oCence of the MoCoy boys. outto stills | i Mo pliison Mounts o rounding country communicated with eivili. | '1¢ Qu¢ e A’ - e ) should die, Finally ' scouts w e P TT o across the river into Kentucky and, T finding no MeCoys near to interfere nathann Mot al ARILE e (a1 nnual ar- | tke prisoners were tak as near their | Eastern urist (ou the prairi nbers of the ation who were in tow! | the great strdggle, an heroes of that night are now on 1} department, which gradually eve nen's At the time Look several of tha paid fira 1 out of associ Poe Started Over a He It was on the occasion of the rivalof & steamer thal tho slight incident | fathers house us practicable, tied to trees | don't vou, in de, have | nated uear the roof. Then people got_beyond their control. It was burned, | store. A thousand people sought admission. | the chitos of half-pay aud three-quarter volun occurred which caused the ingiscriminate | and thelr badies tidied with bullots | with na- | the story that a careless carpenter, however, and this article does not attempt to | 1sh 18 dead, but that night was | 'Cehrervion, Seod that ntbnttian aut) murder of men, women and children, The | The crime was committed on Kentucky soil | < foli- | worked during the day on the el hold auybody responsible for its destruction | s lively = s s cricket.” Shoriff | yc'ro)) e was elected chief by McCoy slaves wero eng in loading | as thev knew the governor of West Virginia | #ged banks of the brooks, the wide expand- | at eventide, gone to his famil or the later holacaust. 4 Guy mounted guard et the door. Only the i o Onier Salter : swine on the steamer, when some that had | could not be prevailed upon to houor a requi- | g SKy 3 v ing a lighted candle in & rude In those days Omana had three engines and rters, and Drs, Leisenring, Mercer and | engineer the Herald; ( previously been placed aboard on the Vir- | sition for the Cowboy—Solitude, stranger! Why, there's | socket affixed to one of the sides | a hook and ladder. No, 1, Omaha, took up a abody were admitted. Galligan was fear- | L0oh ChENCEE TOE LES HOPEE ginia shore by Hatfiela's men, escaved from | Raudall buried his murdered be \d pre- | 0 station ouly twenty-five miles away thav's | of the shatt, hence tha contlagratios position at the cistern then on Fifteenth street | fully bruised and cut, but survived, although | VOr(Qd o the denartmonty as, their pens and scampered off among the Ken- | pared for rev He orgaunized a gang to | runuin’ two rival saloons. in fifteen minutes after the alarm in front of what is now Poppendick'’s salog for weeks a shoulder and part of his back | oo § tuoky hills, Al were captured batoue oid | levade the s country, Two dozen des: ey — becn sounded there was not a street leading | Within thirty minutes she burst a cylinder | was as black as that of a £thiopian A aftlat Axaariral il S “razor” back. ‘Tho animal could not be | perate fellows were found in addition to his A Bad Talc from uny section of the city which was not | and went to the repair shop. Bhortly after this episode Sam Donnel yet been forgotten, uor the weight of woo res found, and tho Hatfleld sluves insinuated | four remaining sons to undertake the. raid b Life 2 filled with young and old, friends and lovers |~ No. 2, the high sounding monarch, Fire | then the local reporter for the Heruid, wab | SO becl forketlon, uox she wetht o that McCoy's negroes had secreted the | Kaudallled the party. They were gone six | . She—I haven't scen vou for five years, Mr. | hastening “to see how seviously the | King. stood over the cistern at Fourteenth | importuned by a firemuu to go into the burn. | MOV L, . ansosaden’ b Killine Mo aal Barker. How's that little rowance of yours | venerated structure was to be injured by the | and Farnam streets within shadow of the | ing building and sve what was doubtiess, as R paTTe— A Y oy T T S P h, Tom Adams and Charley ( witn Miss Hendersont tlames burning building. Having exhausted the re- | deseribed, a roaringhell. Donnelly felt ‘dis incouraging Outloo extended 10 both households until finally | y lost one man aud several Barker ~Miss Henderson is no more. They found confusion in the ascendant. | ceptacle it went to the cistern at Fourteenth | posed to aceept the invitation, but* was dis _ Epoch i8r Anse Hatfleld, afterwards known as “Devil | 4 She—~Whatt lhqm lunteer firemen—men who had spent t and Howard streets and filied the cistern it | suaded therefrom by the writer. A few mo- | “Well prisoner,” saia the prison chaplain ANAR SR RUCETALUS KDOWD. M8 SRVl e Ok alarall B Barker—No: married. day in the torrid heat of the Union Paci had just abandoned. 1t then returned to its | ments later the floor went down which sw to the convict whose time was uearly up, *1 e b g g g b AL R e . She—Ha! ba! You are stifl friends | shops; who had toiled wearily over lede tist love and exbausted it again, when it | lowed the firemen. Lator Donnelly went to | yon oS 00U Gone vou good chesters and notified +01d" bt | After theso murders there was thought from early morn; who had lefu unfiuished | filled it a secodn time by emptying the cor- | New York, secured a place on the” Sun and | MOPY PR AN TN SR 03 that on & certain doy he was coming after | \! more startling than an Barker-No., She ed me, suppers beneath the parental roof, re | ner of Fourteenth and Capitol avenue, was killed at a fire, a lu ladder falling on | 8, ) Ao, ok 10 . prisgn that hog and would bave it or blood. Now if | 8 in; until = New Y | i e struggling through the crowd The rotunda | No. 8, the N a, found o cistern back | him. Had he accepted tho iny nof that | “It's put me in bu 1 1o go back 10 town Thats o nayiin Rangal thaughoinis | ) evil A Captain Hatfleud, | Object Lesson in Church, was full. Nearly everybody was a self-con- | of whatis still Milton Itoger's store and made | fireman, however, he would u Jave gone | and knock thunder out of the witnesses who | numerous six foot sous could. do to bis entivg | J1 Vance and several others concluded they Epoch, stituted fire chief. Up thestafrs started sc most of it. 3 to Gothin to meet b th couvicted me." tion, it was to manipulate a good \\\'.Hl]‘!_\ ut an e ‘“\' e foud \] u"l‘“\\.f‘“: | “The effect of Rev. Mr. Harkin's sermon | ¥l pipemen. It was a loug climb to reach of the Union Pacific shops, When morning dawned hundreds of people B leM0abin ot yeare sibadls e tou | tug tho'el killlng old Randall’ McCoY | on the torrovs of Hades was los the top of that bullding. Willing hands | also putin an avpearance under the redoubt: | lingered round tho ruins, the walis re- | All for gotten in & moment aud preparations wer e =ia “How so scized the inert hose. Round the Newell | able Charley Fisher, worked ut a cistern on | sembling the rugged irregularity of the saw mu my bankl mado for giviug the Hattields a warm rec . _was surprised and the hou “Tho chureh was as cold as a barn, and the | POSt8, across platforms, up flights of steps, | Thirteenth street, south of Faruam tooth mountains. Portions cf them which ! want fiy fired before Randall and his son Bud,theonly | prosnect he held out was rather agreeable,” | KIuking the Lose at every angle, sped thé | = While No. 2 was drawing water from the | were considered dangerous were pulled down mor trangor Hon. ono left, could got thelr ritics ready' for ac- | Prospect hoheld out was rather agrecable.” | pipand,” cistern ot Fourteenth and Capitol avenue, | with ropes, Then oceaus of waler were | Why,you se ) cough, - Kept the Appointment, tion. When the house was observed to beon | g a noted bolle stated the other day | . - Will they ever reach the attiol” shoutea | Council Biuffs sentover hand engine, the | poured upon the red nd the awful | and pe tor if she Anse and his boys were prompt in keeping | fire Miss Alaphia McCoy, a beautiful girl of | * 06 DOLO. 10104 408 - DR 'l A4ay | g busybody, pscue, and @ steamer, the Bluff City, by | search for the firemen was | don't wet betier soon, and th s tell ma their appointment. Scarcely bad they ¢ cighteen, was seut out with a churn full of | that she owed her beautiful and soft Why in thunder don't they turn on the | meaus of the Chicago & Northwestern rail- un. Nobody expected to find them. | Haller's sure cough syrap will cure it right Tug river, however, when they found them- | milk to extinguish the flames. They did not | complexion to the use of Spanish Court | water!” excitedly inquired another. way, Both were received with cticers by the | Nobody was consequently disappoiuted. | up; so you seo—five ceutsi Thauk you aclves covered by @ balf-dozen rifles in \hc) believe the wowen and chbildren would be | Creawm, - l Qutof the rotunda dasbed auother busy- | multitude, The Ikescue, mounted, so wJ First was found the blackened truuk of oune ru-‘mg. '3