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HOW MICHAEL MADE HIS PILE | ~ Your Mother « TO USE NO OTHER _ SOAP FOR LAUNDRY AND HOUSEHOLD PURPOSES, THAN HIS COMPOUND FOR CURING FEVER rddess That Re- Every Fall and mpstency Roeall- ing Early Days in Leadville, Horses in orgonclos. sbade.” is always i sav Tt is one of my favorite tramps from Lon. | don to this spot in sunny weather, as there | - ttul place fn | 1and womeu tako o gléeful and nlmost fron. | ' | | churchyard has come to possess for me a MRS 15Vt Aind precious intercat, - Thato s no record of its age; but as it wa rady a | Withoutmoney andwithaut prisa. *—l S 1816 Douglas Street, Omaha, Neb. Thou art going hence, fore nd thon sheddest not a tear; is well, for tears shall never Lament thy leaving her YPuE CROWN BEAUTY," A PERFEC bust. Ladle coro, will poxitively incroascs tho size of your mthree to five (nohes or money refunded. Sealod purticulors 2e stamp, C 1 snerodiy con fldential, T VW e Q E the open soa. Thelr fleet of all manner of | (RF \T R")F \ B\ A“ERK \\g is the averag v that it requires con- “pack” or “drove,” directing by the splendid . Probably the mostgveent of thoso feats was maneuvers of the different boats the course | that of Colonell Guy V. Henry's command of the whales to a shallow bay. So expert during the Indln tirouble two_years ago in f are theso Shetland - whalers in driving that i i South Dakota * command ‘consisted of otosti . Beneath Which Gray's Immortal Elegy Was B shoal of swholes fs sl Tose it thncat | Feats of Our Soldiers and Plainsmen Beat throo troops 0f colored mrtloes of T sy | Interesting Story ?f How a Wosternor Got Actually Written, given for forming the “drive” well outside the World, ry and 0 HthdRkiss battery His Wealth, the “drove.”” If the whales once enter the b They had beeff, sdbuting for a week in the chosen bay their pursuers come to close Bad | '\mh‘“.\l.“, on the morning of T 9 quarters and then the conflict, begins. cember 20, 1800, vy started out on & scout WAY TO_ WORDSWORTH'S OLDEN HOME | "iiiGin;"tie' waters bocoming shatiow tho | PHENOMENAL PERFORMANCES IN THE WEST | gpinber 0. 18 fortyitwo miles and they re terrified whales endeavor to make for the turned to campidbout 4 in the after. open sea, but are met at every point by a 4 4 uoon. At 8:30:p:im. news of the battle A British Official In Petticoats—Whale Driv- | yopfact wall of boats, altogether filled with | Records of Some Long Distance Rides That | o Wounded Kt was received and | Wrestling with the Fiekle Ing by Native Shetlanders-The Merry )v\mvlrn-lls ulnll som lllm-.n‘I.hnn;’:\mlllnlxnwm Have n Aathenticated—Marvelous - hwrl later the m:’-._\lw..q .-un-u)u-l‘r.u- “wulted el dge ely desperate in their efforts at cap- i o8 o sriehn Me ’ine Ridge agenpy, which was reached at I e e L S A e Ay and “he howling. shouting, screaming g bl ook e B N R after, a"night ride of forty-five g At 25 Cents a Day, of the water, discharging- of fire miles. Two hopts later a courier reported Said s, stoue throwing and, rushing to an attack on the:,wagon train, which had fro of the equally desperate 3 boen, 6§ behind, and the “Buffaloes,” as the [Copurighted, 1892, : 1y, form e exciting a scene “':')u» ocent \w-"nf ‘\wul*i‘m\'lnlH-rmln golored soldlets wore Jalied, dashed ‘back | So many fortuncs haye been made in the 6, —[Specia LV .| as one eve nessed outside o | ofcers between Berlin an ienna was 0 miles to the rescue. ie Indlans were | west that it is a commonplace thing te P i Jab. [S—{Sheclal "o THRDER]S | o0, e nald 0% batkis. _Oocasionally & (5% thought of sufticient importan=s to cablo de- | 4riven off in-a short skivmish, in which one | \\cor that itis a commonplace thing to say It has been pretty well settled by literary | EEIRAT SOE OF BRI Oechsions As & | stougnt of saficient importanss 30 oable de- | ¢aone:’ was " Rilled. The: commacs Lig | tHAt's matitame out here with noshing and ferrets that Gray actually composed a por- | ryle the school is doomed. Once driven into | tailed accounts of it across the Atlantic, and | hardly returned to, camp and unsaddled | 18 now rolling in woalth, but the story of tion if not the whole of his immortal Elegy, | shonl water whore they ¢an only flounder fn | It his been made the text of innumerablo i1t avas ordered out with the Seventh | Michael Connor's wrestlo with fortune pos 0 sitting i outh porch of theold | mighty struggies, or high and dry on land, | dissertations, more or less learned, on the valry to_the mission building, six miles | sesses more thun ordinary interest, Connor Lt e i l,"l ;‘_'"l'u' i it ’_\:'M,.‘ where they often toss themselves in their | military value of the “lessons to bo drawn | distant, which was burning, Colone Hones 50 THG ”‘. _“_'ri .[”f'"r";‘ ':;' 2 : :\”" A Stoke Pogis church, beneath the “ye ® | mad efforts to escape, their butchery, which | from the performance. This long distan asked for two hours to_feed the horses and proprictor of » flourishing Madi \d sickening sight, pro- | ride was "unwll 14 remarkable feat, and | rest his men, which was granted, {50 st "'.‘ saloon in Chicago and owns prop- 1 (oode, With wondorful dispalch, Tn their | 80 it was, but Amorica can discount ft in | At noon ~ o ' courier ropertod . the | erty in that clty of considerable valuo, bo iy ok TSl oo I | o o MYl | S ity S i st of oo vl T ISFAR SUPERIOR TO ANY OTHER IN THE MARKET . ; YOULE O tETD d plainsman ave s stomed to remar dles” was again sounde The Seventh was "source! ahlk aouo! 6 te B T 5 ¢ is hardl b dtga by L] it blo” rides in the regular line of duty that | met near the mission, and under cover of the | | I“\"‘_:;I'i:'l‘l_""v"; P ”I s LSt AND IS MADE. ONLY BY all England; and I love to sit wher ay e dripping thing they call a river, the | they take such feats as matters of course, | fire of the Hotchkiss guns both regiments | G4 st e enyer.to look into amin » sat, beneath the yow tree's shade, and muse | yjanzanares, at Madrid, Spain, comes down | and their astounding nchievements seldom | withdrew to tho eney, arriving at 4 o'clock | M€ speculation in which he intends to en on the quict and hallowed surroundings. In | from the cold, gray heights to the north and | find their way into the newspapers: mueh | p. m. of Decombor 50 | gage e . & this way the famous yew tree of Stoke Pogis | winds half way around the city from the | ""‘I“l"!“' they cabled across seas and conti ”1;-‘ \Im-'w”‘.ul.d u‘un‘)mlr ’:nvl;'\wl'n\-'lil- In 1878 Connor was a nomadic being, float & orthwest to the so st. Wha ients i enry's battalion had marched 103 miles | fug from place to ples ot v i o :;‘,'\"i',‘m s i‘(";,,,‘"\fllh.,: ALY ows, | It is not easy to make a comparison be- | and fought two skirmishes with the Indians, | 1% fFom place to place and always wanting CHICAGO. forming innumerable islands and curiously | *een the old and the new world riding be: I'he actual time in _the saddle was twenty Ave the town in which he happened to Co——— bounded strips of land, all accessible at most | Cause the conditions are entirely unlike, but | two hours. In addition to the usual pack A few dollars was quite a fortunc in his Dr. SYDNEY RINGER, Profossor of Medicino at University College, Londo, treo of maturo growth when Giray wrote, in | soasons by any barefoot boy or garl: and it is | this dissimilarity all redounds to tho crodit | cach horse cavriod bianket-lined cover and | eyes and the possession of a few silyer coins Author of the Standard"'Handbook of Therapeutics, actiaity whites s Jolo ot 1 churchyard beteen 400 and 500 years old, | an odd fact that thofieh thero are two vast | of the American, ‘i I iropean race which 240 roumds of am IAbon aweliching twenty: | would often induco him to undertake hair From the catoful analyses of Prof. ATTFIELD and’ othors, § am . atifiol o) i * m for | and pretentious bric ross o Puente | St two continen! king was woi o e pounds. One animal dropped dead after |y 0 e ot o y the yew, which in England attains to most | {1 o0 fgned by the architect Herrera, | hours and thirty-one minutes. The cable re- | days later. Thése were the only casualties | backs or gold coin, as his earnings, when he I8 In np way injurion fo hgalth, and that it is doctdedly moro nutritious than venerable age | and the Puente de Toledo, nearly 400 in | ported the distance at 861 miles. “Lieutenant | and thero was not a sore-backed horse in the | worked, were small and ho generally man fafn Bdvareisomnts o g larar and hiehly digestible.~Tio quotitions in et It standsfifty feot south of the old stone | fongth, crowned by the staties of Sun Iaidro | Reitzcnstoin, Uhe irst German to finlsh, To- | 10t. This Hide was over & roush conter i | net o e up to his incomo. N He migloading, and eannot hossitiy apply (o VAN TR i i TAPAUtes ar quito south porch of the church. 1t top has boen | and his holy wife,its solo use to the city of [ quired seventy-throo and one-half hours. | wiiter weather. Twenty-fonr. hours tutor | o <. GkEtiting & GB6URET Bt IThe Jalse refiection on VAN HOUTEN'S CocoN is (hus effectunlly vepelled, and the wery epeatedly cut away to preserve the tree, | Madrid is that of an endlessly used and all- | TRe count’s weight was given at 125 pounds, | the “Buffaloes” were again in the saddle | N ki el duthority cited to inpure it, is thereby prompied (o give 1t veris handuome fonimn ey = e M BN i L A o T By e 2L o and his animal carried little else but a sad- | little the worse for their hard mareh could do many things. At times he e —————" o————— il R which is still about thirty feet in height "Ten thousand women sonk and spiash_and | d1c_and a bridio. This ride was throush 4 | this fot Henry, now stationed at | Was waiter, or, as he terms It, o Tho girtl of the trunk I8 triflo over twelvo | wousq und beat the linen of Madrid within | civilized, well settled country over excelient | Fort Myor i Vivginin wis wanvioned o “hash slinger.” "hen he could wash dishes feet and its huge spreading branches, reach- | jts scant waters every day. Notan article | r0ads, and every conven ience had been a mended by General Miles for a brevet briga- | in big towns and cook in_ small ones. Hoe to the north, almost touch the roof tiling | of clothing is clsewhere washed. No other | Fanged for beforchand. The mounts were | dier gen ip. glao could tend par where no mixed of tho churcl above the porch, while towards | than these Manzanares Invanderas aro ' por- | picked animals selocted for oficers’ use and ™ nomenal Porformances. D RRlIASE ALY Abt L b CuLd el tho south and southeast fuily a dozen | Mitted to labor us laundresses ; and fo threo | hid been propaved for the ordea o Gor | Colonel T. H. Stanton, now stationed at | BiY an dAmArel br o a0y, sille, to the ground or softly tap the headstones of | 81t0 tho infantry and artillery barracks upon | Gf the Jowrnoy, and the Austrian Borin | the Platte, i to be credited with one of the [ Y& QR lnat tlvod ALl 08 Tevons g preju. o ot ox sottly fap thie headstones of | tho Helghts of. Montana del Prinsipe Y epltter, s arrival Cin' Borlin. | yemarkublo ridos of tho service. Daslng the Hiee against mixed drinks of "every deserip- I ot llC from 800 to 400 persons could stand beneath | the windows of the queen regent's A |I'( lt"‘ N‘j. P {2 L\"'"') I}‘,""' Indian troubles of 1876 he was_commissioned After wandering arouind through the 4 165 remwreTtiads ments in tho royal paluce, and circling | dorful feats on the huve baen anthoes | to carry dispatches from Fort Laramie CofiHcr o6 a8y Tt b in fl‘f'"!-'l"‘_' west H you were wandering north o the main | Around away beyond Toledo Gate, the mov- but only such records us have been authen- | in “Wyoming to Fort Hobinson in Nobeie. | Conner one day found himself in Leadville, conch road fromWindermero to Keswick. {n | ing dots of red and blue, yellow and e e e sl 12 | a distince ot 100 mil He made the trip | O/ ; 0 MBe W July, 1875, In vain ho e oty or aemate (0, ROMMCK 10 | ohiprist biils mroab ATy 6F AaAORS Amotichn soidrs mea i Jstatico Tidos | on one horse for twelve hours, batween oot | S0U% o poratig bo hlsowrmind) . He s owaty rosd o moreland, Eingland, # | arma and legs on them ik tree trun SLamerlcan soldlors are made on horsss in | and midnight, Thera wasTia'oed exoett for hiwd blenty of chances to wisld a shove | and would uttract your attention the | Yoluptuous breasts and shapely neck B ey R oo biokes eds. o A | the last twelve miles, and he had to make | Rl B i Ll B LU enclosures on either side hug 'h trees | Muscled and bronzed as Turks; the most | Mili Ty Ry sy R P "““N;" his way across country from his knowledge | PIBEIng” or dish Shh dernan him to do. and sycamores push tremendous arms across | 4rduous toilers, the wickedest blackguard Mg <"Ix“v‘k-h~' f}\_‘; eight Poiiday | of the lay of the land.” The last four hours oot o e o ramanG aec T poo. You are not woll, and havena " i sl c0varthe wity, 1o 1 withal the sunniest tempered souls in | and the riders will average about 160 pounds, ridden in darkness, The colonel was | Ple of the bustling mining town managed to monoy or time to se0 4 dos-or, the walls and completely cover the way. It is At iaking o burden of 383 pounds for cach | pocompanicd by, fote half preois amens | worry along with. thelr damaged. pots. avy Cutoit the name printed hars, R o et g hote, vou, w Dt iere are three grades in this laboe. They | Horse 1o corry, It must also be remembered | whom was Baptiste, often mentioned by | PAIS, without wiving any thought to the - — SR Sarare's sirla oD this DIBN | aro tho mistresses, or amas, the overseers or Ut the Amrican rides werem e in a wild | Captain John Bourke in his writiogs of the possibility of repairs, * Perhaps the trouble RIPANS CILEMICAL 00, the highway—the rumbling of the stages, | ®Yudantas, and the lavanderas themselves. ‘l'";!{“\_ Kither s\\}lnn)m‘k At ].:-«n')‘ frontier. The next day two Indians on fresh | ;‘-'-‘“" i Connor. It was in the summer NEW YORK tho langhtcr of gy tourists ‘and even the | ALl4ro women, The first are tho agents | Idians and most of them wero through e B b Tus T e Nothlne s it 3 = notes of the couch horns—are stilled. In | \Who receive tho work from the hotels, great | Tough wountain districts or Sy DB o stwo, rides resilted I keoping the | he mountalus woro looking beautiful, Pasteiton a postal eard summer the place s thronged with birds, | houses, and the city agencies in hugo lots, | dnd saudy plains that afforded livtle food, ennes from joining the Sioux and saved | The . melting snow from the Writo your own uinio 5n the v 280 JITOVOreNt Chovlorars oo na if | ond are responsible for its safe return, The | Water, shelter or rest, the goverament much money, to say nothing | Summits — filled the streams and other sl fo of the eard; put, it in Even these “)I.’\I e H(‘lhul )4|‘li‘u‘lll as if | ayudantas or oy ors, are reall} the “BuMlo BHI'S" Great Feat. of lives. A i all around was the freshest verdure, unlike the Post Oftice, and by roturn BTl o uihaEG lete 5565 of pta | fore-women of from u dozen to ore of | Perhaps the American ride covresponding | * Another notable performance occurred -in | that of lower land at the same heated period. PRl ast s istier ang ¥01dan 16avos, 1t soams & T e thatray | 1nvanderas onch: and they ave responstbio most nearly in distance with the European | 1870 during the Indian uprising which re- (L ‘,“-“)“;*“!" Lok e ralbeagilit good, Try It and toll yeur have been traversing™these fow rods; all is | 108 work placed in their hands by the amas. | performance was that of William F. Cody | sulted fn the Meekor masstere 1 Colomae | Ntburo was hogulling and the vagran heart friends. Hi s et Wity r i At five in the morning, winter and summ (Bufalo Bill'). made in Kansas in 1865, | Colonel Thornburg had started to the relicf | e e oue g or L] Ascending a littlo further there is a break | /B¢ lavanderas will be'seen, many of them | when the state was comparatively unknown. | of the agency. bt hbont noon of the. whive Bt L R WO R n the foliuge to yourright. Some huge gates | With children trundling beside them, creep- | We are not compelled to take the day his commaud was surrounded by the | teriig labor. Down in ¢ SE s are seen. A lodie stands just beyond, and | in% along from the barrios abajoa or | scout’s word for his feat, for Ge 3 cnemy in a vallogyand thecolonel was killed | Of the Fdild ”"* “1"*] 0st. ’””,’ '}q!_h'* suddenly the splendid facades of Rydal Hall, | Iuarters of the city towards” the Manza- | Sheridan has left the record in his autobiog- | early'in the eugagerent. The troops made | [ Hors AreTwol G DRl ‘l'“y the seat of the Le Flomings, appear above | NEre 3 raphy. That commander started out in mid | breastworks of their horses, many of which RIS i.,‘_”'”“l"~) ALl A ‘1’"“} i A8 tuxuriant shrubbery of 1t SHoadid park Near the river i3 an asilo or asylum, a | winter to punish the troublesome redskins e kil d spdft the afternoon on ‘the | pue sgles and b S ",“_‘“{"I" itag Higher still you climb, and where the dark | refuge for theiwr children. Here the lav- | and got as far as Hays City. The following | defensive orgeant Murphy | 9%, Tpresatons of eartl et SORAWAY: sacms 0. make i Agal o over | andera first deposits her charges where | extract from Sheridan's memoirs tells the and a private broke through the cordon of | the flicks Sl Sl A the brow of the Il to tho ‘Joft You pause to | they Bavo fool, care and training free, | Story of the romarkibio ride: rodsking on two chargers and started for | oF flickering candlcs, the u IR T listen, Something liko low and hoesitant | Until she returns for the little ones Ir. William F. Cody (‘Buffalo Bill'), was | relief. In a little sless than twenty-four | T ore e e g i aying caoiled fan organ notes is murmuring in minor chords, | BIEht. Then she saunters to a venta do | first brought to my notice by (distinguishing | hours the sergeantrode 170 miles and reached e gl e g eyano) e Iae oL while a gay and Joyous treble plays in ex' | lavandera, “or cheap washerwoman's fnn | himscll in bringing me an_fmportant dis- | General Merritt's gommand in. Wyoniie U, ottt ultant tones above. Ah! you remember, | #0d takes her copeta of brandy,or cupof | patch from Fort Larned to Fort Hays, Merritt started with four troops of cavalry | 1 oW, .Connor was pastle, With his F“‘{‘{ These are the voices of the two cascades of | COffee, and at once repairs to her own bar mee of sixty-five miles, through a sec and with a battaligwof infantry in wagons. | Kood hand: i ho it s Ly coanalie Rydal. Their songs were sung to the poet | OF little washingbox or station, provided for | infested with Indians. The - despatch Thus handicapped; he covered the 170 miles ;":;‘\‘-X»IIUXJ’;v\|[|"~l’Il"l‘ St Rt BRIl ek N GR0wosthefor fokty gach washer. By 6 o'elock you might count | formed me that the Indians near Larned | in fifty-four and ne-alf hours, and his com- opforo. But ho did not, want to soll his lap: [Tho eminent speciallst in norvous, chronie. privato, blood, skin and urinary disonses. A rogular ang Between the Lituled falls and the | from 5,000 to 8,000 of these sirange creatures | were preparing to decamp, and this Intel- | mand wis i condition to s info a fight at | PIbess for pelf and refused the work that | registered gradunte tn madicine, asdl piomns and ourtiNoatos show, s still trosting with tho xeoket ey ¢ % R hie o Valley at work. ligence required that certain orders should | once. When it' is remembered what | Would paid 8o woll. ‘Ho was not a (G Lrentimani Or Josn ot vieaxnods. niuhi luasos and wil formy of private disoa s, No mirous Westmorland hills, in the Luno valley of | ot : od t s © . graceless acamp; “Had his opporsastilee beon W Lreatment for 1088 of vital powor. © Partias unablo 1o, visit me'may by trestol at nema iy Lancashire, England, in one of my recent The entive slobing, sandy banks are | be carried to Fort Dodge, ninety-five miles | Murphy had undergone durine the preceding e tes ot .l SODDOEVID LW pondence, Medlelng or jnstriments sont by mall or 6 xpross sacuraly packsd, no marks to 1nlorts wanderings in the lnke district I camo upon | C0Vered with drying poles. At this time of | south of Hays. This, too, beingt a particu | thret days, his ridemhroush . it s o eiai. hight haye madg his mark in some entsor sondor. One porsonal Intorviow preforred. Consultation fras. Corro1pan'1010 striotly ety sty e D e idie rnment_oficial, | the yenr the water from the mountains is of | larly dangerous route™several couriors hav- | country, over ill-defined trails and. much of D fossion or u lotters. As it is, he is . Book (Mysteriosof Lio) ant froo. Ofice nourad . (o9 im: Sundnys 10.ain 10 13 Sond sesns (o ontr This ofticial was & woman., You could not, | i¥ ‘temperature. But it seems to make no | ing been killed on it—it was impossible to ght, mustietand as o phenomenal per- | jploonkeoper, but a ‘very romarkable one. | s— = = = — =2, and she would not, tell whether. she was | difference with their labors, Here and | et one of the various ‘Petes, ‘Jacks'or "ims’ | formance, Ly 7y ¥ Ho reads all the poots and, though without forty or eighty years of age. In other re. | there are huge cauldrons of boiling water, | hanging around Hays City to take my com- | On this samo oftusion Captain . 8. Dodge | educ ""f"?v'lf'xf“v t””':'"f;f which he is most CENT S.E.Copl6™ & DOUGLAS gpeets sho was exceedingly chatty and | Fromtime to time a trifie of this is poured | munication. Cody, ledtfing of the strait I | marched his command eizhiy mikes i foud Indicate that there & tno genuine pootd Pt . — o— friendly. She was nearly six feet tall. Her | it the little hollow where h one toils in | Wasn, manfully came to th ue, and | teen hours. _Lieutenant Wood of the Fourth | Sen e iheiaiols Ii"\."dflll he was IN R[ST P Q‘Q’J g frame was like a man's, and so was her face, | Uie sand and water; but this seems to'bo | Proposed bo muke Uie trip to Dodize, tabugh | cavalry' and his troop rode sevonts mites i I s v mas ot ug 6 16w N « s BANK She could outwalk any yeoman of the hills, | 10u¢ more from 'habit than necessity. | hehad just finished his long and perilous | twelve hours and-came i frosh s L LTI L PAID ON A SAVING and was firm and hard "as iron. She wore h lavandera brings her own huge | ride from Larned. I gratefully accepted his During his invasion of California in 1842 uv‘mu-fl ’m*'i'. d xl‘nn‘l‘n")‘wl‘h: ;\‘ 'n":'ifff-‘-‘.fl I Bparige GV S S ARYON AUWYMAN, EWNASH GBLAKE hobnailed boots, a short heavy woolen | Yol of bread, perhaps a bit ‘of | offer.and after short rest he mounted a | John C. Fremont and two companions rods “Leaving Leadville he started on an aimless DEPOSITS APITAL $760.066.80 31\ hno | Thos & Kunaro. # ) ey - | cheese, a clasp-knifo to provent unduo liber- | fresh horse and hastened on his journey, | from Los Angeles b Mot boy ns fode sl R B i skirt of nome spinning and weaving, an un 5 n p-kni preven ue libes halting K8 bk inad Har a F Journey westward. Several miles from the der-jacket of corduroy and the grotesque | ties from the straggling soldiery near, as Al pafigRonto redianit o way, and then | eight days, which included a stay of twenty- | 12U found a place where there had been short-skirted,red-stripped bluo cont und reg- | well as to use in cutting bread; and just 'be- | BIY for an hour, the stop being made at | four hours at Monterey, a stop of over half 4 amp. Strewn aroundswere a number of il ulation cap of the British postman. fore oon they breakfast in huge wooden | gioon Crock, where he got another mount | duy at San Louis Obispo on account of a pub- I jelly jars, indicatiug that the departed ' Al bnge in my own achiovements s a | Shods on salt fish, potatocs and coffes with a | from 8 troop of cavalry. At Dodge he took | Jicreception and delays for slcopin, cnting, | SDALL jelly jars, indic had been luxuriating, : : A B 1o o, 2881 of red W R edahs some sleep, and then continued on to his own Fremont figured tho distance at s | dWwellers in the camp had been luxuriating, walker, but I could not keep in pace with | measure of red wine provided by the ama, SR ) (Frerd 0. mont fig th e at to some extent, in their mountain abode. ihis womnn for o halfamile, Hofore Thad, | duplcating this meal us a dianor av 4 In the | POSCFurt, Lamed uwith moro dispatalis. | i and o rond was meroly a trall much | £urohing” cavelully Gomnor Tone” thohs; | dovoting our an 1o¥on don't noed to sacrifice the lives of your puffing and panting, fallen behind her for | afternoon. g at Larned, as ag: © [ of it through the mountains. = Each rider | Sod AIER AT SN b : oved ones when S oiia s il Lehiud shep dor ey at ke anutals, and the moment | tAOAIE with toings for mo ot Fort Hoys, | hadthirea native horses for making frequont, | §oreTsof MLt & dozen fur e senocleatioiie Dephtheria and Membranous Croup faithful body had carried the British mails, | their fo s disposed of the tinkle of the | G¢n I ¥ b changes. gathered together pf withered sor 3 i {?v‘:):‘:! ::x’ilcga?\fer'm\::-‘:i- :r»‘:rv lrh:hzefi et !;:fil“l};n 30 min\nt:-l-;‘.‘:l(l((n:.%n!lhrfl:;x:."'f’::-l;‘.l,:ifl' about 850 miles in less than sixty hours, and | In 1870 four men of company H. First cay- | tea s duly placed in the jars, Tt was of a contagion of thom, and thero s also s twunzlyr-onu »‘.t““.)’ A“gn!y‘ :rm'k R l'l.l]-\‘ and refresco have expired, On these occas. | Such an exhibition of endurance and courage | Ty, bore dispatches from Fort Harney to lurid n‘cd»‘ U is, a very dismal looking hati s peeific medicine for 0 3 ter over, a5’ sho | 51008 overy one dances, girls of 18 nud wmey | 8t that-time of the year and in such weathor | Fort Warner, 140 miles, over & bad road— | liquid which an uninfornied person would re- | gats " and we The Cure of Them roadside thinking the matter over,as she by L‘!.‘ e it O O e O | s Tbr tHon ROUGH to convince me that | twenty of it sand—with little and bad water, | spect as medicine. Turning back, Connor ro. hpAu iy disappeared with a fine strong stride that 1 | of 80, and th' scenes along :\an\mrvs‘urv his sorvices would be extremely valuablein | it twenty-two hours, eighteen and one-half | entered Leadville and sold. the ten as o ';o'r'"‘l th’e‘ nl;"‘)m when they have not run beyond humiin reach envied, I could not help figuring out with my | very picturesque and interesting. But when the camp I retained him at Fort | of which was actual marching time. The | sure cure for mountain fever and every other g Write 1o stick in the chalky dust of the stony road | Itell you that one of these iron-framed | Ha: the Fifth cavalry | horses were in such good condition at the | complaint prevailing in the camp. He dis- R.C. SIGEL, In Crete, Neb, that she bad already walked nearly the wenches must wash and dry ready for the | H2 o him chief of scouts.” | eud of the ride that atter one day’s rest the | posed of the six jars, His conscience smote * My e rete, Neb., tance of five times the earth’s circumfer- | star " which is done by the criadas in # ords, | men started back, and made the” home trip | him, but he was glad to get the money and | o¢ roloving | itIn need of any treatment. and you wilifin | euce for the pittance of 10 shillings per | he city, pieces of linen equaling the cleans The pony express, established in 1560 to | at the rate of miles a day. was wild for more. - With the cash in hand, | hiaw. sumeries that bls troatment -basod on many yours' ox- Yreel, or but &40 for theentire termof | ng of ‘Soventy sheets in order to earn carry lotters between the outposts of civili- | In 1850 Lieutenant Robertson, First cav- | he saw a man who kept a stock of druss 1o the most effocti I AL TR L SR S T (1 Ywonéy-one years drudgery ; coliie 3, day) shio postioal seuso In it allis | 2a¢ion on tho Missourl Hivor and. the mining | Biry, rode from Fort Lapwat so Fore Wil along with & varicty of other things in a o bpdedd LI . 2B EROFAE YU, L8 A few mornings since [heard somo pride- “fi: LR"\ Rl}fi‘f-;h'd on-looker pather than | campg of California, was productive of many | Walla, 102 miles, over the snow deep in | small shop that seemed not to bo making a Yo ARBTHE VIOTIM OF ANY NER ful conversation between “cheery” London | with the drudging lavaudaras of the Manza- | yyeuplg rides, The distance from St. Joseph | places, in twenty-three and one-half hours; | great deal of money, and invested his capital O I RONIO S Ot BITS costermongers and Covent Garden porters, | nares. Spaan L. WAKEMAN to San Francisco was 1906 miles. The first | and, starting nexv morning, rode back in two | ina lot of small bottles and some re 1y Hive: (ha Varans atrde antl which T afterward found to be true, showing T FHT AR A L thn TGa . et AU RECH 4 wholesome medicines. “His_ proparations SHAL Ry R aN o osioux bl T —_———— ;};:moz\‘v;»;()lr"x“r:.‘w‘1.x;:‘s(z“r;:‘nxxl}:la:’xufi-l-\n‘:"l‘.:;-tllfl‘: 4 B4 ‘i A fourteen, the third and many others in nine, [ In 1877 whilo Chtot Josoph was Spmpant. | sold well and he aquickly amassed quito you will only let us e ¥n, reache: gl s i The riders had divisions of 100 to 140 miles to noral Miles sent Captain . Fuller | small fortune. ~ He then invested his monoy sonal or writte Roquliax and bard teaiolog originally socured. | - Kote Fleld's ipathington, | The riders bad divisiop relays of horses at | and five men out on a scout to discover the | judiciously, Prospectors having moe groy, K"ow SRy ansL Or ¥ liten ARE TROUBLING YOU! RE R shelawly ot thelr flie iAlbers Cheval-. b LiTHtion June 10, 1800 i the album of o [ $H108 Bhd ¥ twenty to twenty-five miles. ile's whereabouts. They left Fort | ordinary changes of striking something consult with lier, now the greatest of living character im- e e & wade fun of him as “a prosy, | In each corner of the saddle was a pouch for gh with a horse apiece and traveled | were “grub. ed” by the medicine man " -" " FHEE Well,coma and have thom examine! by our optioian Personators, practically lved among the | pwkward young man.' ‘The conrtosy of this | lattors. aud in orde o od D the weight at | through a mountainous country, whore they | and the upshot of it all was . 00 SIILTA “ 8| ongtahargy fogemar Bted Vith apateof costers for years; and the marvelous fidelity | clegant revenge, was, probably, only exceedod | i minimum ghe arms of the rider were re- | found only three feeds of grain. The cap- | Connor went to San Francisco with what e RM—tho best [n L0 Word: 1 YOR 40 st nood #ikase of his songs and impersonations of coster | by the laughing eyes and nimble fingers with | gucoq'ton revolver and knife. Night and | tain returned after a short r at Fort | said was a barrel of money. Sad to relate, 1 tellyou so and A 1vise you what 10 do. GOLD life and character were wholly pained in this | hich ho wroto It. T ;jl_"g-'i:"}';l]"'“""“ by the . in rain and sunshine, in winter's cold | Eilis, making the round - trip of 80 miles in | he fell into bad habits in Frisco and, be. | WE CURE CATARRH, All Dis- | | el R BUTER L B AL Mg manner. Sims Reeves, the one tenor who, | courtesy o 8 0 D 00 and summer’s heat, across parched plains | five days. Someof themen extended the | tween gambling and d nking, he blew in Th t, | eves fromdjon puir up. l]g{(x'll(;u(:r,\iilllgtl!I"\‘;;‘L:iklix.',\“ll\::::l nu"llh;s song: Thou art going hence, God bloss theo; and_over rugged mountain trails, these soout still farther, and covered 600 miles in sv\l';‘r;ll m..l.‘sulmurm.l lmu l\‘u'k remained | €ases of the Nose, roat, e ro o vel Fi ved, ouce ‘‘carried the Thou art going henée, farewell; hardy plainsmen rode their tough steeds at | twelve . with him. Out of several speculations on the M M y & B C knot,” that is, the head pad, of a Covent May the devil ne'er distress the Dre .k..l..‘-k speed. General Miles himself has a record for fast | Pacific coast he made m.u-.'- money than he Chest, Stomach, Bowels and ax e r 4 Garden porter, and got his start as a singer May the wide world use thee well. he lato James A. Moore, the first post | riding that is to this day the admiration of | spent, and then wended his way Liver. Jewelers and Opticians in the former foul dens within the sound of trader at Sidney, Neb,, made a ride which | the cowboys of the southwest. After After dumbfounding his old acquitin, i o prasanc epyio 7 B tourist lead: fnt may well lay claim to being themost remark. Afondor of \Goroulme Lo Crook i 1885, | the places where he had worked as a lowly | Bloed, Skin and Kidney Diseases, [ Faraaw and Fifteont Strect hen y ourist fancy leads you into able on record, Ho was at Midway station | Miles took command of Uncle Sam’s forces | menial, he sailed for Europe and. shent o male Weakuesses, Lost Manhood — Scotland. go further. 1 is but o littlo sea- in western Nebraska on June 8, 1360, when 4 | in that region, and he rode from Huachio | eral yers seing the s i S:JRE;J POINTERS! Jaunt from Aberdeen, Peterhead or Wick to L very important government dispatch for the | into New Mexico, a distance of 150 miles, in Returning to America, he started in a hat . et 41 bl ) \‘:hs‘:'::fillhmf‘ |~4\L\u<‘|l’ llm-:.; ,l‘.«.,.u lvn-.x. \‘.-r,\l Y it some :‘.‘“.”:’.X r“‘vr‘“ the Pacific coast arrived. Mounting his pony, ;hlx'lwn hours, ‘ouly stopping to change | ?n. Im\tlu- w.‘w.-l\v n.] New York City, but | ,FILES, FS8TULA, RioBUNE: pormanentiy. cured e 0s ble, possessing many pleasant aucien A torment as thou art; hesped on to Julesburg, Colo., 140 miles | horses. a § al other business undertakings et il Ll DG T oustoms, and thero is no cnd to modern Audhimo il tn roprihtiee away, and ho got oVosy—Taoh’ of apoeq | In 183 Licutonant Bell of the Seventh | collapsed, and Connor discovered that hehad | eifher saxvomtively Drivate OF dolleato nature, of historic and pagan monuments of strange ool out of lLis mounts. At Julesburg he | cavalry rode 105 miles through the Bad [ no talent for business before he had gone Call on or address, with stamp for Clroulars and curiou st. Not the least of your They will miss thy merry lsughter, met another important government dispatch | Lands in North Dakota in about twelve | very deep into his capital. After a swhile he | Book s Recipes, = pleasures th witnessing a *drive o A3 the schoolboy doos Tuis Fods for Washington. The rider whoshould have | hours with one change of horses. moved to Chicago and opencd his saloon, 5 ca'ing whales,” which you are almost certain And the jokes which followed after carried the dispatch east had been killed the In 18574 Colonel McKenzie rode his com- | more to have something to do than to make Dn SEAHLES & SE“RLES mlln. if your visit to the islands happens in Thy visiting abroad. day before. After a rest of only seven nd into Mexico afte I;l)m.. :xn-)l I\u'kzunm monay. Sinoe then he has been very careful X ’ ay or Junc. z v P SO minutes and without eating meal, Moore ians, beat them in & sharp fight and re- | how he invests his gold and has added 1o 1l 5 i § Tho Poterhond and other whaling ships Fyrowollt the Lord be near thee, started. for Midway, and he mad the round | turned fcross the border, making 145 miles | bosseasione s mis 04 and has 1P 8 18ih: 8%, Omana, Neh formerly completed their crews at Lerwick And the pious shun and fear thee, trip, 2%0 wiles, in fourteen hours and forty- | in twenty-cight hours. The following year and theso times wore always periods of great As thy Quaker fricnd hath done. six minutes. The west-bound dispatch | he madea dash into Mexico after hors activity. Of late years Shetland’s interest L4 renahed Sacramento from St. Joseph in ves and coyered eighty-five miles in fif in whaling has been principally confined to II'H 1ite, v nothi A ex it 1t days, nine hours and forty minutes. n hours. driving the monsters ashore. ‘This exciting Ay yéars be not a fow, “Buffalo Bill” was one of the riders of this | Colonel Lawton once took a troop of cav. work s often tromendously profitable. In Moy the deyit mise his dus, overland mail seryice, and Buell's “‘History | alry from the Red Cioud agency to Sidney 1845 a great shoal of 1,540 “ciing” whales J hija du of the Plains” makes this record one of his | Neb., 125 miles, inswenty-four hours. On were driven ashore in’ Quendalo Bay, tho PR o notable feats: of his scouts namod - Edwardy, on another southernmost bay of Stetland, lying be Otpen Ploror e ot to | . While riding pony express between Red | occasion rode seven days and nights in tho tween Sumberg and ficful He I el Y gtorias Wwedding present to | pugtes and. Throe Crogsings, soventysix | SlorM¥ Madro momtains and covered 450 dune, two years ago, a shoal of several hun- | Prince Ferdinand of Roumania, who is miles, Cody had a dangerous and lonely | miles on one horse | : drod was successfully landod on the e CaptainFountiihy’ once rode eighty-four Home : Industries ¥ about to marry her granddsughter, is to | route, including the crossing of the North opast. consist of the Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath, and is likely to prove more expensive to the recipient B the donor of the gift, as the fees of investi- ture which the prince will be called upon to pay to the various dignitaries and officials of the order amount to no less than $2,000, a somewhat costly honor to a prince whose financial re- sources ave so_limited as those of the Until quite recently these shore whalers were illy requited for their captures. The financially omniverous landlord, called the “laird” here, truo to his octopus instinct claimed the Fight, up to 1 Shetlanders oue-half of the ‘entire proceed of all whales driven into shoal water oppc site, or upon the shores of, theyr domain; o sort of riparian right on the Almighty for What was scnt to save men from starvation on account of rents and other burdens im- to tax the poot | Platte river, one-half mile wide, often much swollen and turbulent. An average of fiftee miles had to be made, including change of horses, detours for safoty and time for meals.' On reaching Three Crossings, finding the rideron the next division,a route of eighty-six miles, had been killed during the night' before, he made the extra trip on time. This round trip of 324 miles was made without a stop except for meals and change of horses, one of the longest and best ridden pony express rides ever made.” * miles in eight hours and at another time traveled 110 miles in twenty-three hours, Great Staging Records, Stage coaching 15"'a little foreign to the subject in hand, but a few records will be of interest in this comuection to show what Americans are capable of doing. In 1864 Ben Holladay, the owiler’of the overland stag made the'trip froni Fols Kau., in twelve days and two distance was very Heirl day had special” poaches and th st By purchasing goods made at the following Nebraska Factories. Tf you cannot find what you want, communicate with the manufacturers as to what dealers handle their goods, TAWNINGS, | Omaha Tent-Awning | COMPANY. uss 80008; | 8:/ 11 1\1li1'S Omaha Rubber Co. | New Noble & Lfucoln Flags. lamn ol Two of the best ma Manufacturersand job- | chines on the marko mby the ‘laird’ himself,” an old Shet- | bridegroom-el&:t, b Paxton & Vierling llndus[rla]lroanrks vers ot ali kinda of Fib- | Stady’ and a0 1o th explained to me. He may, however, consider himelf for- In 1900 the pony express made one trip | him several thousand aollars, many horses | ,Fiess Hammocks of As the value of the blubber will average | tunate that the queen has not taken it from St. Josoph to Denver, 625 miles, in tw | being ruined by Ut firious driving. | Hona for catatogue. 1115 | ' Of the b . | ave \ days and twenty-one hours. Tn 1865 Schuylé¥ C6lfax ompanied by | Faroam st. . R 0 st ogaird . often thus secured | into hor. head -to confor upon him the | *Falama oo o, o bullt the first | Sam Bowles, of thé”Springfield Republican, fram §2,000 to ,000 as his “right” in a single Order of the Garter. The dues of eve sverland telegraph, and in look A th dicrig A he (i Wrought and Cast Iron | pairing of all kinds of e eatoh. Erom 183 to 1888 the *lairds” wore o1 A 1e cues of even | overland telegraph, and in looking over and Albert Richardson, the war corre- | EREWERS bullding wor k, Enginos, | machihery. 714 8. ih i considerate enough to rob the whalers of but | ® Private investiture of that order | route in 1860 he got as far as Sult Lake City, | spondent, traveled from Atchison to | scmmmreeannt NEWE . brass work, ote.; " | 5% Teleyhona 1410, 80AP. anethird, In Seplombor of ihat year the | WMOUNt to from 85,000 to $10,000. 'In | Wwhen it became fmportant for him to tnist | Henver, 020 miles, in four "and ono-nait | Fred KEG Brewing | Omaha Brewing Assn Pagé Sop o olalm was resisted in tho courts; tho | Some cases the Kunights of the Garter | the journey to the coast in a very short time. | days From Salt Luke to Virginia City the TR Manufacturersof Unton | 1KON WORKS. burFlal Brand'” goods. | trada by Chas Mg Co, = — 1 Manufacturing and re | 16% Farnam st | Lincoln, Neb. Novelty Works, Most complete piantin | soap. 116 Lickory st. - st west o ight i ing and d T ——————tsess— FURAITURE, 0 plating o SYRUP, WHITE LEAD, | Chas. Shiverick & Co [aager Wemia Ve | Farrell & Go. | Carter White Lead Co Puinives Carpets snd Ny 4 | braperics Jells, Corro An ul * | meat jcriouls paro white ed 1208 Farnam st e “ Sib and Farnam yrhalers won their cause: and the “lainls" | have absolutely refused to pay thess | O thereupon took horse and.fo Ly, com- | distance was 575 milés, and they madeitin | our Bowied Cabinet | Guaranteed to equal it 4 O repused 1o pay these | pany T and guidunce, pace With | seventy-two hours, one strelh of cight | Beer delivered o any | ouiside brands. Vienua Hve since been compelled to content them- | dues, and the late Lord Palmerston in | o veral pony expr all the way | miles being covered in thirty-two minutes, | PAFE Of the eity. 1007 | Kxport Hottied ' Bwer selves with the meager enjoyment of wit- particular refused togive a si i 3, | Jackson st Deliverod to familios. ) & give a single penny | to Marysville, Cal. He was in tho saddle A streteh of seventy-two miles into Placer flm%;nthur'thunvwfllhw'w.m hamrd- | toward the settlement of the do. something over four days m‘ four nights | ville was made in seven hours, including hen & e of ‘‘ca’ing” X g, mands made upon him by Garter King- | and must have traveled nearly 600 miles, | stops. This was the piece of road on whis mme':;n:“t':""hflflu“‘;l“urilm:vll‘l‘l‘!‘l;t‘mmi; at-Arms. The latter retaliated by re- | much of the distance through a literal desert | Horace G y had his celebrated experien Fhaarble. A the whole town of St. Ives. | fusing to aflix Lord Palmorston’s banner | 810 over fugged mountains. = | with Hunk Monk Sornwall, goes mad when 8 shoal of pilchers | over “the ‘stall assigned to him in tho | ke, ok distance rid 8 0 AxeTion havs Great Cowboy Ruce Next May. ot - very live S| - 3 3 5 - 3 gers, but there ::'hrghh~i.°-3:u-flfl\:‘r:nll\; -*h'flhmt;;-‘d«» ,crl;ll;h of ‘-filt. G “llxnnvhupel at Windsor. | iy one remarkable performance of that kind | A new record in long distance racing may very other vocation, even toa wi ng, s neglect, howeve 5 1y i had no effect [ on record. A frontiersman named X. | be made within the next few months. Tho | '&h:;\u:‘umo Lg:"&m:\;;:m. 1;«,'.'.'\2:&%:‘:5 upon Lord Palmerston, who veplied that | Aubrey galloped from Santa Fe to Inde | cowboys of western Nebraska and South | = - hedid not often go to the chureh, and that | pendence, Mo., in a few hours less than | Dakota urranging for a race to the [ _ i ::‘rmm ython nnces. kaives. mud o | When he did 1t was perfectly immaterial | even days. The distance was 840 miles, and [ World's fair during May. The start will be §. F. Gilman, M&"-Tn’u“i'mlm;.hn):m;x flwr:“:}u to him whether he had an ©0ld flag float- | the rider had four changes of horses. He | from Chadron, Neb., and the Missouri will h &1 J - 10131513 N. 16tk at. C K. Blaek managor. FLOUR, b7 |Omeha Milling Co., | Omaha Mattress Co Oftice and Mill, Matt feather piliowssnd 'oomforsers Totrade only. 1044 Nicola st Reed Job Printinj COMPANY oo Bullding. F - AN won a wager of $1,000, but he had to be lifted | probably be crossed at Sioux City, Ia. The b may assist in the hoped-for destruc- | ing over him or not. from his horse at the end of the journey, Fide will be on_cowboy ponics, and. half & tion. Colonel Honry's *Buflaloss dozen crs rs have already entered for eys mako all haste snd splendid | After a night with the boys omard s hav 9% oa ¢ oy g 3 ‘m‘. ‘::““ ko.alk haste sad. tok i Yours for & clear hoad—Bromo-Seltzer | ¢ MABY Femarkablo rides have been made in | the cont The distance will be about 30 1813 N.16th s i the army service of the west, but o modest | miles, Fugo BeNzixaes. T A e A 7 e i