Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 17, 1893, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

i ———— ——— LSE OF WESTERN PROCRESS P Lvidenos of Activity as Gonspiouous as Rug- ged Mountain Peaks. THE TWO CONGRESSES BOOKED AT OGDEN Fich Mineral Strikes HMere and There- Cal- ifornia and the Asiatics -Railcond Hallding and Retorm Sprams The West in General, Two important conventions or will assem| dags. The first 'o meet will be the cattle men's congress, on Thursday next, for a three days scssion, and will be followed on the 24th by the Transmississippi congress About owners of northern Utah issued a call for a eattlemen’s congress to meet at Ogden. The meoting was well attended, there being dele gates present from Utah, Idaho, Montan: Oregon, Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, Texas, Indian T ry, Kansas, North and South Dakota and Wyoming. The congress held its sessions for three days in the Grand Opera house, and besides pass ing & number of resolutions voicing the sentiments of the mecting on various subjects of interest to cattlemen, took the initial step for forming a perma- nent organization to be known as the Inter Mountain Stock Growers' association. The membership of this body was to include in the inter-mountain country who sted in the affairsof the range The progress made during the year has been promising, and it 18 believed that at the second meeting to be held Thursday the or- ganization will be put on a tirm fo The meeting of last year attracted considerable attention, and its proceedings were reported quite in full in the papers of the west Among the questions which will be under discussion at this meeting will be the im- provement of stockyard facilities at Ogden, and it 1s thought that some action will be which will result in the building of ing houses. "Pransmississippi congress, Bex has shown in previous hends all matters ting twenty-two states and te larly such as require_the o gement of federal legislation. Preparations for the en- tertainment of the delegates are complete Ogden _proposes to eclipse formes i 5508 congr as Tne issues, compre » welfare of ities. The representation is mu than at former congresses, and it is ex|x that the deliberations and conclusions will represent the western empir ted se neentry timent of the Mineral Developments. The Nine Mile mine in Missoula county, has produced some §25,000 bullion auring the past three months is now said to be §00,000 worth of ore on the dump, and the teu-stamp mill, operated by the same company owning the mine, is run- ning to its full capacity. The Old Dominion mine, nes pokane, ‘Wash., has developed in the upper workings six feet of a vein of pure lead carbonates, ‘which will run as high as £00 in silver to the ton. The strike1sa well defined vein that gives no indication of running short in quantity. A large additional force of men has been put on_and the output of ore al- most doubled. for the expenditus ment work on the property. In years since it was discovered the Old Domin- jon has produced over $2,000,000 of precious metals. All the reports from the new Vanderbilt mines in San Bernardino county, California, indicateso rich a find that miners and prospecs tors are eager to et into that region as soon as possible. Hundreds of men have alveady gono there, and every one is predicting & {wmllfltinn £ 4,000 or'5,000 for the new camp n a8 many montk In two days last week $1.400 was taken from the Much is expected of Elk City, in Idaho county, Idaho, this year, As the state is to construct a wagon road from that place to Mount Idaho, giving outside communication, arrangements are under way for five large vuartz mills: The good effects of such laud- able enterprise will be felt by the people be- fore the close of the ) Besides the quartz mills, several placer companies, with suficient capital to operate the mines, will go ahead with considerable push as soon as the season open Mr. D. M. Steen has just made a sale of a group of twenty-five quartz claims in Prairie Basin, Lemhi county, Idaho. The considera- tion was #160,000. "The deal includes the Yellow Jacket, Cleveland, Lincoln and Con- tinental group. The new company has de- cided to construct a twenty-stamp mill. The Black Jack mine, at Silver City, Idaho. is yielding very rich ore. The highest grade, which is shipped, goes $500 per ton, while the second grade, th: will be milled there, will yield about $150. The Black Jack 18 certainly one of the gre state, and wil of £100,000 in_develop- min add largely to Idaho's output this year. All of the other mines at Silver City are doing well, and_several mills there will soon commence crushing. ‘The most important discovery of the year was made at Kendrick, m Latah county, 1daho a short time ago. While running a tun nel in the Sonoma a cave was reached at the distance trom the face of fifty feet. The cave is forty feet long, twenty high and twenty wide. This tunnel 1s in the the mountain, some distance abovi side of Bowlder creek. The mud bottom of the cay species of slick, decomposed mine ing rock, mixed with carbonates, A pe was run down into the muck a distance of twelye feet, but how much decper it goes has not yet bocn ascertained, Assays placo the value of the « ton, gold T2 ounce: i and lead 40 per cent. In the neighborhood of the Sonoma there are ten other mines that give promise of becomining fine pro i ittle more development. 1t is now that Kendrick will bec well as agricuitural dis A Dend : The most depressing sight T saw ina month of recent travel on the Pacific coast *yeas a dead city, says & writer in the North- western Maguzine. 1 will not give its name or loca for 1 do not want to aad to the troubles its few remaining inhabitants. At the height of its boom it had a population of 7,000, now it has a scant 2,000, and these are holding on only because they hoped that a railroad would do something for the place this year or next. The town i well built on the shores of a beautiful b but it has not a single wagon road lead back into the country. The in on all the landward not a single industry dlscover to support save one sawmill. T ally living on each other. sat down Lo an ex g forests hem it sides. It has that 1 could the population, people are liter- In the big hotel 1 ellent dinner served by white-jacketed negro waiters, but there wery ouly threo guests besides myself. 1 walked about the lonesome streets and met _nobody into the many and saw no custo A daily paper appears regularly and traius and boats come and go, but there is no perceptible business transacto lio town was founded by a land company as a igantic speculation and the company took in money enough from the sale of lots to ac cumulate a reserve fund from which the ex penses of the hotel and newspaper are still id. Perhaps the railroad s constantly invoked as a special providen, will yet do something to revive the place. 1 hope so. In the meantime it offers a curi ous and striking study to the intelligent traveler who has watched western townsite booms. the course of Moral Spusins., Two Oregon towns are bowling the crest of the has placed the sc Sunday saloon social club are undor arvest for sale of liquors and play at billis along on wave of reform lof condemuation on the permitting s on Sun day. Twenty-two ladies who carey on a | retail trafic opposed morality and for. bidden by law are in confinement or under bail, aud as many wen have been arrvested for gambling or for “being proprietors of hoases where gaming is carried on.” Tho moral epidemic threatens the comfort and peace of mind of others whose conduct is somewhat mottied, or at least not as lofty as » at Ogden within the next ten | one year ago a number of cattle | worth of gold | There | The company has arranged | the eight | atest mines of the ompany, which | Astoria | The directors of the leading | the purist ideal a fow weeks Jail accommodations must be enlarged or forced omigration inaugurated |, Down in the southoern end of tho state re | form tendencies ate no less marked, but of a | different character, Ashland nestles amid smiling fields and woodlands near the foun tain head of Rogue River vallay. The | | timber-crested Siskiyous shelter it | from rude Tacific ~ blasts and_tem per the sirroceas of the south. Natur. Ally the tendency of the natives is ethereal But, unfortunately, n_millstone _appears to rd the elevating offorts of the four hun dred. A recent attempt to concentrate the | social-clect and cut loose from human dross | 0 to speak, culminated in_a vigorous kick expressed in plain United States, to-wit The mediocre idiot who conceived this idea of locally creating himself a gifted fool | of the order ‘of the brazen ass who runs at large in New Ashland York mistook the situation in The field of ‘taking society in { hand' by cheap clerks, spittoon jerkers, spike-tarled purveyors of soup de bouillon and etceteras was i ‘situation’ indeed from the measure of ridicule that thes unsophisticated vi { dence have be ms of misplaced o obliged to patiently submit 1o, the ola siuation ut &, 812 and §15 per month will do for a long time to come, and | the planet will never be cracked by another attempt ‘to divide Ashland society Despite oceasional friction, the wheels of vivilization are making an impression of or less perman where rolls the Columbia, the Rog The Japanese California drops the Chinese question tem- ily to consider the influx of nt the Japanese, if they o not vio | lnte the contract inbor law, can enter the country as freely as otfier immigrants. IFor | & long time San Franciseo petted the Japs, made servants of them, put them into places of domestic trust, and elevated them above | the Chinese as a superior race. The re L the Jap has become on in some quar. act there fs little dif- common laborers of ific and ‘the Willamette, { | mor { { | Japanese. | tion has now set in an object of As o matte ce between and Ji the an. Both work on the nese of late underbidding even the Just now railroad contractors find lient to engage the Japanese, and in protests from the white iborers. It is stated by the an Francisco Chronicle that “the Japanese e completely overridden the Chinese in Chines: | it conv | consequence there have been ugly the Sandwich islands,”” and it is the warning the same thing is | likely to occur in the United States unless measures taken to re- strict their immig So many of these people formerly bound by contract ancisco that the immigration bureau at the port found it necessary to take summary action, with the t that the tide has been turned to Brit- ish Columbiu, whence these immigrants commg down' the coast in great nuu bers. The difticulty would seem to be that the pec ple of California, in their treatment of the Japanese, have not distinguished between the better class—the docile, intelligent and d destitute or industrious—and recruits of the slums and | the waterside, who are no better than the Highbinder Chinese and have come to thie country to prey with the spoils. upon it and return homs rond Reports. A prominent contractor and engineer stated to a Salt Lake reporter that contracts iave been let for the grading of between 200 and 300 miles of extension of the Chicago & Northwestern railroad from Fort Casper to Ogden. For the past four or five days sev- eral contractors from the coast have been in Ogden looking after contracts. The con- tracts so far let have been mostly in sections, which is doubtless done for the purnose of facilitating the work and getting the road- bed in condition at the earliest practicable moment. The contractors who secured of the work are from Denver, San '0 and eastern points. In the nego- 0 g the contractors cago & Northwestern Railway through its agents, although thy ing done under the name of the Utah & W oming Railway company. The Cas| Iribune states that “A corps of railvoad surveyors under Engineer Rogers is now in Casper and will commence next Tuesday to section the survey the Elk- horn extension to Ogden. Whether the road | will be pushed to early completion or not is | vet a matter of conjecture. Casper has bright prospects in any event.” In three or four weeks the Dakota, W | oming & Missouri River railroad will have in n eight miles of road from Rapid S. D, west to about one and one-half beyond Scott's sawmill. About the 1st of May more steel rails will be forwarded together with about thirty more cars, in- uding flats, box and passenger. The com- pany expects in two months to receive its new locomotive. Progress of Irrigation, There is an increasing interest in irviga- tiou in all the western states in which arid lands exist, but in Arizona the capitalists are especially bold in pushing forward the work of watering dry lands by artifici means. The greatest project of this char- acter yet undertaken was recently begun and plans for one greater still are now an- nounced. Contracts for the first have been placed involving an expenditure of more than §2,000,000 for the construction of r 13d voirs and canals to utilize water from the Gila river in reclaiming 500,000 acres of land, | which will be first class fruit and vine lan | The second project contemplates the re- claiming of 400,000 acres of arid land with water taken from the Rio Verde, stored in three immens: s and distributed by 150 miles of ¢ nd and the canal routes have | yed and the 2,500,000 necessary to undertake the work subscribed. It is evident that men of money have great faith in the possibilities of Arizona. “Mines and Mills.” “Mines and Mills," a weekly publication devoted to the mineral interests of the w grows and improves with age. an equal in its particular field, published at Salt Lake City, the hub of the domain of precious metals, it mi the development of the rich resources of a region which an- nually swells the nation's wealth by from £60,000,000 to ¥75,000,000. This vast, fascina- ting and remunerative fieldif enterprise has yielded uncounted millions, yet it is in its infancy and gives promise of far greater re- sults. ‘l'o watch and encourage the widen- « industry, to note its progress und detail its varying” movements is the purpose of fines and Mills.” all concerned in stern development the publication is an in- valuable compendium_of *mineral informa- tion. Mr. George K. Canis is the editor. It is without Huge Chunk of Coal, The largest solid block of coal ever mined and moved in the northwest, if not in the Uaited States, was placed on board the cars at Chelan, Wash., last week, for shipment to | the World's fair. General Manager Kang. ley, on his recent visit, gave orders for the specimen, and a score of the most experiences | mi s in the camp have been steadily at work for the past three weeks in cutting and ouo tons. It is encased in planks, with heavy iron steaps, which it is thougnt will preserve it intact in transporting it, Great skill and 1ngenuity was necessarily exer- cised in mining the immense block. ruskans Schuyler Quill has sles. Nobraski and > Editor Sprecher of th been very sick with me Geneva is to have an electric light pla: work to begin inside of thirty days. The State Modic foty | Nebraska City ) , 1T and 18, Henry Brown, colored, was chosen of Brownville at the recent municipal el tion. Brick vaults for the county records have been ordered built in the Madisou county | court house W hful o offers to furnish the boats for tho Nebraska canals John Spelman, a (i proposed \d Island book dealer has failed, with liabilities of about §2,500 and stock amounting to §1,500. Judge Ogden stirred up things in the Washington county court house by fining | four jurors #10 each for tardiness | Tho Blair Pilot has reached the mature newspaper age of 21 years, but it isn't a bit old or decrepit. It strikes out vigorously for friends au 18t foes, and the proua | movingit. The block 18 twenty-four feet | long, five feet cight inches wide, and four | feot’ cight inches high, and weighs in the | vicinity of 41,000 pounds, or nearly twenty- Should tho mania stick for | boast of ts sditor is that it never steaddles will meet at | | they cause no nal boat builders ara sending | THE OMAHA Straddling doesn't pay, and the Pilot knows itand prospers nccordingly The Republican Valley Congregational as sociation et last week at Trenton. Nine counties and twenty-four churches were rep resented. The fourth annual confercnce of the Manufaetared. Young Men's Christinn association of the el Fremont district will ‘be held at Neligh " | April 21, 23, 2% FIFTY THOUSAND A DAY TURNED OUT I'wo 13.year-old Neligh boys ranaway from home and broke into a house at Beemer. . | They were arrested and one sent to the | reform school and the other was returned to his parents, The 2-year-old child of Dr. Carl Larson of Oakland picked up a piece of bread in her her's yard and ate it. The bread had *n covered with poison and the child's life was saved only after the utmost exertions of the doctor. Sheridan county had its first cyclone last week. The wandering wind struck the farm of Rev. G. W. Read near Rusnville, carefully to pieces a heavy wagon with a ho 'k on, and then disappeared in the upper- atmosphere. The Ladies Missionary societ, bytery of Nebraska City m t week and elected th of the pres t at Tecumseh following officers | for the ensuing year: President, Mrs, W. | are made there daily. B llql..\‘n.\ umsel; vice presidents, Mrs. | mg o careless obsorver thore does not s prdyy Beatrice; Mrs. Franks, York: | 45p0ar to be much difference botween Mrs. Bradt, Lincoln} Ligge 4 Mrs. Coolce. H a Bank of England note of the present ary, Miss L. W day and one of those which were first cording secretary, Mrs. issued toward the end of the seventeenth treasurer, Mrs, J. H century, but when looked into it will be | S. Alldin sident of Phelps ( found that the present note is, asre- | week cele an eventful period of his rds the quality of the paper and life by giving 1 iquet to the whole neigh borhood., T'wenty-one years igo he was crossing the briny deep to cast his lot in America Ihe yage was almost com- pleted when there arose a violent storm and the vessel was wrecked off the coast of Nova Scotla, twenty-one miles from Halifax. The ill-fated ship had on board a large number of passengers, nearly all of whom were lost, Alldin being among the few survivors. Over 100 persons partook of the sumptuous supper provided for the occasion A few days ago two Atchison, Kan., found a bottle floating in Doniphan lake with n piece of paper folded in it. They broke the glass, and discovered a_message written at Clarks, Neb,, June 10, 1891, evidently by a young lady, and addressed 'I'o the For- tunate One.” 1t was signed, “Yours with Hope, Julia,” and read: *'A lonely maiden of I8 summers, living in the village of Clarks, men Neb,, takes this method of secking a beau, | @nd is produced in the paper while it is be he far or near. If he be good looking and | in a state of pulp. In the old manufac- can write, he do. The Platte river at | ture of bank notes the water mark was this point is very high and swift at present | caused by an immense number of wires and I trust a bottle containing this silent message will go with speed to good fortune. Hoping to receive a reply before the termina tion of the year 1891 he distance which the bottle journeyed in following the wind ings of the Platte and Missouri rivers is fully 700 miles. What has become of the young lady is a mystery which may be solved by any young man who wishes to address in carc of P. O. box 152 at Clarks. William Tippy, the DeWitt saloon keeper who escaped from jail after having been sen tenced to ten years confinement in the peni tentiary for manslaughter, has been recap- tured i 1 id isonce more behind the | When unsized, support a weight of bars of the Saline county jail at Wilber. The thirty-six pounds, while when sized you escape occurred on October 25, 1892, and he | may lift fifty-six pounds with it. has been at liberty ever since ago the authorities at Bowie, Tex., had him under arrest. Requisitfon papers were secured by the sheriff and vthe wanderer returned. he crime for which Tippy was tried and con. victed was the murder of George Plucknet, On the night of November 14, 1891, Plucknett was in the saloon and drinking. An alterca- tion arose and Tippy ordered his barkeeper, i cre, to put Plucknett out. Halfacre struck the first blow before Plucknett had made any attempt to protect himself. The first blow rendered him helpless, if it was not the cause of his death, The man was dragged limp and dying to the door and tumbled into the gutter, where he expired in a few minutes. Within six days after the crime both wer und guilt, slaughter and were sentenced to ten years each in the penitentiary. A few days Western Notes, May 5 is Arbor day in Idaho. Stock on the northern ranges of Wyoming is in prime condition, A syndicate with $2.000.000 proposes to build a large smelter in San Francisco. Seattle proposes to have a_packing for disposing of the surplus fruit crop. The Monta and Army encampment will be held at Great Falls, May 10 and 11, Helena, Great Falls, Livingston, Missoula and Butte rolled up democratic majorites for town officers. Humboldt county, California, will send to Chicago the shell of a redwood tree twenty feet in diameter. A gold nugget wor th & have been picked up in Ore ago. This find w: worth over $200. The bite of an Oakland (Cal.) dog be- stowed upon a book agent nas been assessed by & jury at $5,000. A dog like this should not be kept by a man of ordinary means. Better even subscribe for the book. Furtherveports indicate that the ship- ments of selected oranges to England have proved successful and the growers of south- ern California as a consequence are looking forward to establishing a trade in prime navels in London and other big English cities During March the Union Pacific shops at Cheyenne rebuilt eleven locomotives, and yesterday the seventh engine boiler built this ye was shipped. The boilers are worth, as turned out, 2,700 each. Just now the shops in this city are busi than ever before, and more new men are now under pay. Beginning with next month it is ex- pected that an increase in the hours per day will be declared. The Casper ( “‘the Powde house = reported to on a fow days follovied by another 'y0.) Derrick reports that er drillers broke a rammer been ob- ¥ until uthrie w this weelk, last week, consequently they hay for a few da lived to shut down new one can be procured. Page C in from the well on Posion Spi He reports everything as working nicely at present, as they have got past all difficul- ties. They are now downto a depth of between 800 and 900 feot and steadily drill- ing. The postponement of the third session of the National Mining congress,called to moet at Salt Lake City on June b, until September 11, is probably a ‘wise act. The date comes ouly six weeks after the Transmississippi congress at Ogden, and in one of the months of the Columbian exposition, and might therefore not have, attracted the at- tention which its importance deserves. By deferring the congress until September it is probable that a much more successful gath early ering can be heid. [privately of course) practiced these feats, But fo_return to our muttons—or Ts a symptom of diseascof the kidneys, It | Lotite o8 \fOHUT B0 OU it will certainly be relieved by Parks' Sur ’I“"’I" to Mr }'“‘"’)"X, “['I'”';‘ we left at Cuire. " That hoadache. Sackychomks' SUr | the bottom of the thiyd fight of stairs feeling comes I Parks’ Sure Cur price §1.00. All dr m the same cause. Ask for for the liver and kidneys, rists - Drummers Organize, The Traveling Men's Social elub was organ ized at the M hotel Saturday night and permanent quarters have been engaged at that hostelry. The oMy ed w S, Wel rdent; J. W. Lusk, vice | s ele D. Wisioy, seorotary. and L. Hussins, | 2dmits, “‘one or two sllght bruises,” due s ccrotary, and L, Huggins, | 1o, ack o otice in carrying Asurer thirty char members | ™ » doubt to lack of pr ice in carrying o enrolled and the organization seaery | @ live dumb-bell in one hand instead of out with ¢ prospect of continued suc- | tWO lamps, as is perhaps the usual prac- cess, —— There are three things worth saving Time, Trounic and money —and De Witt's Little Eurly Risers will save them for ou ‘These littie pills will save you time, as they act prompuiy. They will save you trouble pain. They will save economize doctor'bis you money s they Hignest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U, S, Gov't Report, 4 Rol heriff received word that the local | DAILY BEE BANK OF ENCLAND'S NOTES | n Where and How the; Orisp Bills Ars Pecullar Charncteristios of the Paper Money—Safeguards Against Imitations An Interesting Process—Even a Special Priating Ink is Used. Ina_picturesque Hampshire nook in | the valley of the River t, says a Lon- | don exchange, stands a busy mill from | | | which is produced that paper whose crispness is music to the human ear all the world over. Since 1719 this Lever- stoke mill has been busy in the manus facture of the Bank of England note paper, and at the present time about 50, 000 of the coveted erisp pieces of pape the excellence of the engraved writing, a much more remarkable production. The fact is, the Bank of England and forgers of false notes have been run- ning a race—the bank to turn out a note which defies the forger toimitate it, and | those nimble-fingered and keen-witted gentry to keep even with tho bank The notes now in use are most ¢ hO! ately manufactured'bits of paper. The paper itself is remarkable in many ways. Its thinness and transparency are guards against two once popular modes of for- gery: The washing out of the printing by means of turpentine, and erasure with the knife. The w other pre e mark or water mark is an- aution against counterfeiting (over 2,000) stitched and sewn together; now it is engraved in a steel faced die, which is afterwards hardened and is then used as a punch to stamp the pattern out of plates of sheet brass. The shading of the letters of this water mark enor- mously increases the difficulty of imita- tion. X The paper is made entirely from pieces of new linen and cotton, and the tough- ness of it can be roughly guessed from the fact that a single bank note will, sw people would imagine that a Bank ngland note was not of the same s all through. It is not though. The paper is thicker in the left hand corner to enable it to'take a better and sharper impression ' of the vignette there, and it is also considerably thicker in the dark shadows of the center ters and under the figures at the ends. Counterfeit notes are invariably of only one thickness throughout. The printing is done from electrotype: the figure of Britannia being the de- sign of Maclise, the late Royal acade- mician. bt Even the printing ink is of special make and is manufactured at the bank. Comparing & genuine with a forged note one observes that the print on the latter is generally bluish or brown. On the note it is a velvety black. The chief ingredients used in making the ink are linseed oil and the charred husks and some other portions of Rhen- ish grapes. The notes are printed at the rate of 3,000 an hour at Napier's steam press, and the bank issues 9,000,000 of them a year, representing about £300,000,000 in hard cash. seem el NEW ACROBATIC FEAT. Mrs. Moore's Bri ant Falling-Down-Stalrs Act. In these days of skirt dancing, splits and other unmentionable diversions of the fin de siecle woman, it 15 as refresh- ing as an April shower to learn of gra and agility turned to some better ac- count than post-lenten festivities. Thi imistic philosophy is prompted by o fitting item among the fashion notes or so-called “‘Butterfly Brevities” of a Connecticut exchange published right in the center of the lana of steady habits. Doubtless it would not be inaceurate to designate New Haven as the geogr ical center of the inner circle of says the New York World. This little spring boquet of vigor and verity shows that the new gymnasium at Yale was_opened none too soon if the youths of this country are to maintain their 5s in athletics, are the facts as narrated by our esteemed contemporar “Mrs. Mary E. Moore of 430 Orchard street, had a bad fall down three flights of stairs at her home on Monday night. As she fell she had a 3-year-old ‘babe on one arm and a lighted lamp in the other hand. She fell,” the item adds, tersely, “with great veloeity.” Her friends rusbed to her aid, hear- ing her fall, and naturally expected to find her lifeless body. But n Mrs, Moore hasnod attended the ladies’ days at the Yale gymnasium for naught. The “flying rings,” the “human pin- wheel” and the “giant torpedo” once seen make an indelible strawberry mark on a woman's receptive mind, and on more than one occasion it has been strongly hinted that the sisters and sweethearts of the Yale youths have of 430 Orchard streef, There she was, as the New Haven Jougnal man puts it, in simple, unadorned Anglo-Saxon, *‘the baby in one hand and, the lamp in the other, none the worse for her perilous shute, save somewhat shaken up,” He thus continues: - *'Recovering her self she elimbed back to her apartments unassisted. She had,” he regretfully tice in doing this feat. . Other details were not deemed wprthy of record, but to those unacquainted with the triple fall €5'done in Connecti- cut it is disappointing not to learn whether the lump was smoking when Mrs, Moore climbed back to her apart- ment unassisted. The tale appears de- Baking Powder ABSOLUTELY PURE :IMONDAY, APRI | Moore is likely to be peste L 17,1893 fective in one or two other minor poin One wonld like to know whether Mrs, Moore's 3-year-old baby is inured to this sort of thing or whether it also had ‘‘one or two slight bruises.” Porhaps it is customary to use a borrowed infant in learning the act Again, an anxious world would like to know something about the costume best suited to this after-dinner exercise, Did Mis, Moore wear an accordeon-ploated skirt, the Chicago Dress Reform league's approved morning wrappors, or she use the new voluminous full skirt? Prob- ably carpet slippers covered her feet, though one would not be surprised to know that really expert summer saulters wear high French heels. ow that her skill is fully known Mrs, d ‘most to death by manufacturers of patent incom- bustible and non-breakable lamp chin - ne and purve of infant's food will insist upon having her portrait and that of her precocious babe. The advice may stand her in good stead in these days of rival vaudeville managers the only safe way is to have her fall_copyrighted and printod. Within four days half a scove of carnest, young and handsome women may be vaulting down staircases, through fiery hoops and the like, not oniy in the quiet homes of New England, but in the far west. o~ Method in a Doctor's Remady The introduction in our cities of ap ment houses, in which a conside number of has given rise to many amusing occur- vences, says the Youth's Companion. In an eastern city, recently, two physicians were walking together on the street when one of them lifted his hat to a lady they met, patient?” asked the othe “Oh, in a way,” answered the first doc- tor. 1 treated her the other day for a small difficulty. “What was it ‘A wart on the nose “And what did you preseribe?” “I ordered her to refrain absolutely from piaying the piano.’ The other doctor was astonished. “Ordered her to leave off playing the piano—for a wart on the nose! Well, [ atment. " umstances y can't under, and your tr “If you knew the ci u would,” said_the first doctor. *'She oc- cupies the flat just under mine in the apartment house.” h—now [ understand!” said the New York Waiters A Strike NEW York, April 16 -The threatened strike of waiters, which, the latter say, will be »me effective within the next few day was inaugurated in a quict way last evening the Holland house, where thirty-four ters, helpers and scullery ma aldorf also and was so short- that some of the out. The ne Hotel trouble with its help handed in consequence guests could not be served. Briefly, the ances of the waiters are less work and pay and more food and of a better char- They threaten to continue thelr c paign until their demands are granted ,Muns and Polanders Fight. Wiikksparne, Pa., April 16.—A bloody riot took place at Plymouth about four miles from her morning. The mob en- gaged in the fracas was composed of Huns and Polanders, who were under the influenc of liquor. Revoivers, stones and clubs were freely used upon each other's heads until the police made a raid upon them. Six of the contestants were arrested and several made their escape. One man had his skull crushed and died later. Aches and weaknesse in CUTICURA ANTI-PAIN PLASTER the first and only instantaneous pain-killing strengthening plaster. In ONE MINUTE it relieves aching sides and back, hip, kidney and uterine pains, strains and weaknesses, theumatic, sciatic, sharp and nery- ous pains, coughs, colds and chest pains. Odorous with balsam, spice and pine, it is the sweetest as well as surest, safest and best plaster in the world. Price: asc.; five, §1.00. Atall druggists or by mail, Porrer DRUG AND ChEx. Core., BOSTON. AT THE [ v e AR PUBLIC OPINION. “On my trip across the continent in the summer of 1891 I was attacked in Minneapolis with rhewmatism in my Jnee, which lasted me for four months in spite of every known remedy that I could use, including Russian and elec- tric baths, and the use of the waters at a famous Hot Spring. While in Francisco 1 was advised by telegraph to use LONDONDERRY LITHIA WATER freely.+ 1 returned home vith no apparent imFm\'umon'l. and began the use of the ZONDOWN- DERRY LITHIA WATER,and, to my surprise, in a few weeks had en- tirely recovered and have mever been troubled in the least since. 1 have no doubt that the primary cause was some derangement oF the kidneys, and I can- not commend the waters too highly.” By 0. F. PRESBREY, President “Public Opinjon® Tadiisting Co. "FUbbic ObixioN" Nov. 5. 180: ® An Everyday Experience. Still and sparkling Lomdonderry for sale everywhere. Londonderry Lithia Spring Water Ce, NASHUA N. H Chas B.Perkins & Co..Selling Agents, 3 Kilby St., Boston, Mass. PAXTON & GALLAGHT 3 Agents for Omak BAY STATE® ) GUITARS HEl ano DRUMS. S A FAVFRT 10 the d COKTLY | THE LEWIS BANJC. Endorsed by the BEST Playera. Send for Catalogue and mention'the Instruments ycy think of purchasng. 10BN C. HAYNES & Co A BUSTON, AN STRENGTH, VITALITY, MANHOOD o BHIdNS 34V 3., chief consulling phy DY MEDIUAL INsTITUTE, L by the PRIZE ESSAY on rrous and PAysical d Weakness of Men, iddle-aged and oid. rhausted Vitality, Atropy, sebility, apd il Dised s crson_or by letier, \UHES the you J Prossectun with testimonials, FRER Con arge book, 01 ENCE OF LIFE, OR RELF- VIESERVAT/ON. 300 pp., 126 invaluable pro: seriptions, fuli gl only 81.00 by mail, sealed washed; it tells on the woman work, and works safely. want done well ; what it leave Beware something in place of Pearline, do the honest t is as good as " Two Official Letters Greatly The following communications are exact copies of changed To any one suffering from Rheumatism, Ne cial expressions ought to be convinctn, Tar ATnrornonos CouraNy, New Haven, Con Gentlemen—During the past three years Ath.l m, with the most st girla in our Home, especially in cases of rhenmati Among all the different remedies tried 1 know to do except Ath-lo-pho-ros. Tn writing you this T voico the the Tlome who have found blessed rel due T write you this to show we apprec f in usin te an art Pearline is never peddled, and if your grocer sends y received from the manager and the physician of the Worki : Wonkixg Wowax's Howr 91 SOUTH PEORIA ST., CHIOA cold day for the housekeeper when Pearline gets left. Take Pearline from washing and cleaning and nothing remains but hard work. It shows in the things that are Pearline saves who washes, It leaves nothing undone that you s undone, it ought not to do. Peddlers and some unserupulous grocers will tell you ** this same as Pearline.” 1T'S FALSE— or ‘'t hing—rsemd it back, 23 JAMESPYLR Interesting To Rheumatic Sufferers. sraph lettera—not a word or a syllable + Woman's lome, Chicago. , Sciatica or any similur discase, these oftle £S00TATION, 0, Nov. 16, 1802, pho-ros has been ueed by a large nusber of factory results, of none that have always done whit they promise sentlment of the girls here, but of many friends outside we shall keep Ath-lo-pho-ros in the medical department of our Home always. Very respectfully yours, Tae ATaLoPHOROS CoMPANY, New Haven, Con Gentlemen—I have used your Ath-lo-pho-r Woman's Home of our city for the past two years in sever Dest results. 1 have aleo used it in my general practice, and Dr. LUELLA Ath-lo-phio-ros, the one standard and ackr Sclatica, etc., is sold by utable druggists. A Plain, ¢ in stamps. mmon-sense $1 per bottle Treatise on Rueumatism, Neuralgla, etc., to any address for five cents ¢ ity and desiring to give praiee to whom praise I icle which lins €0 often afforded relief. I expect LAURA G, FIXEN, Manager. Citicaao, Tit., Nov. 16, 1893, o8 In the Tospital Department of the Working 1 cawes of Riicumatism with the very 1 consider it an excellent remedy for Rheumatism, DAY-UNDERHILL, Physician to the Home. owledged specific for Rheny uix bottles for $5. s, Neuralgia, THE ATHLOPHOROS CO., New Haven, Conn. “1T IS IGNORANC EFFORT.” E THAT WASTES TRAINED SERVANTS USE SAPOLIO D rDOWNS 1816 Douglas Street, Omaha, Neb. Tho eminent spocialist (n ner: anto, priva ed graduato In madicing, as diplom s and o entarrh, 10t mAn 100 |, seadinal werknos) ¢ used. New troatmont for 1048 0f vital po by correspondence. Medieins or 1astram nts 43at by eAto coutents orsandar. One porsonal interview pre private. Book (Mystories of Life) sent freo. a stampfor elrcular. OF ALL KINDS. We are headquarters for uny article made in hard or soft rubber. WE RETAIL AT WHOLESALE PRICES We mention below a partial list of goods In stock: ” Rubber Bed Pans, Rubber Gloves, Bath Caps, astic Toslery, 'russes, Julder Braces, Atomizers, Cupping Glasses, Syringes, Breast Pumps, Tubing, Ice Bags, Water Bags, Invalld Rings, Air Cushions, Supportors, Rubber Shceting, Rubber Dam. for Den- Cruteh Tips, tists, Band ages, gum, Baudages, woven elas- Sponge Bags, the, THE ALOE & PENFOLD (0., | DEALERS IN Surglcal Instrumonts, Physicians'and Hospital Supplios, 114 South 15th St.. ext to Postoffice. &5 V0UR EYES ARE TROUBLING YOU! Well,come and have them examined by our optician chiarke, anh, 1€ nocossry. fiited with & pair of HFECTION TACLES or EYE GLASS. Lo bost In the World. 1€ yoi o not neod glasses e wil Lol ¥ou 80 And &1v1a0 Y0U WORL 10 40. “GOLD sI ACLES or K GLASSES FIGOM £1.0) UP. Plain, smoke, blue or white glasses, for protecting th» Eyen, TrOm 8 Ko w PAF 0 Max Meyer & Bro. Co Jewelers and Opticians, NEBRASK A National Bank, U. 8. DEPOSITORY, OMAHA, NEIs. veeees . $400,000 .$65,000 Capital Surplus, € Meers and Niractors—Henry W, Yates, prosi 131 R. C. Cushing, vioe prasident; U. Moree John 3. Colllns J. N, IL Kee hier, THE IRON BANK. A Full SET ~ OF TEETH, $O 2d aftor oon rfect it guar 5. Maarie, V. v Patriog; Lawls 4 samo day. | anteod ’ DR W, By { 3rd Floor, Paxton Blook. 16th and Farnam Streets. vator on 16th St elophons BRIN( A STRICTLY PURE ARTICLE. A MOST DELICIOUS 085 THIS WITH YOU Ofiza hours, Y & m. Rubber Goods| t3, blood. skin and urinary dispasys. A rogular and 105ates will show, Is stiil traating with tho graatost 2t 103395 At and fora of 33301, No + Partios unabls to visic mo tod at homs mll 0r 0xprosy sociurely paekad, no marks to lndi- sread. Consnitation fraa. Corragpondenca striotly 100 p. m. Sundays 10 o m. £ 12 m OUCLAS $3 SHOE nJ1'%ie. Best Calt S8hoe 1n the world for the price. W. L. W. L. Douglas shoeseresold overywhere. Everybody #hould wear them. It 18 a duty you owe yourselt to get the best value for your money. _Eoonomize in your footwear b purohasing W, L. Douglas Shoes,whiol Topresent the best valus at the prices ad- vertised above, as thousands can teatity, A% Take No Substitute, &y ave of fraud. Nono genuine without W. L, D(Rl.ru'l name and price stamped on bottom. Look 1or 1t when you buy. o v wioan Sold by Magnns Webbere, Kelloy. Stiger & Co, . J Carlson. Ellns Svndon, [gnutz Newma W. K Cen sy, South Omaha The Mercer. Omaha’s Newest Hote) COR. 12TH AND HOWARD 373, £ Rooms t 2,50 per day. (0P 0oms at §5.00 per dny. Reoms with Bath at $19) parur 10 Rooms with B )10 145D par 14y OPBENED T Modern in Every Reapeo Newly Furni 1st hed Throaghout C. . ERS, Pron. MURRAY HOTEL. The nly hotel In the ¢ty with hot and cold water -and steim he it in every rod n Tublund dinin Vi unsurpaessl RATES $2.50 TO $4.00. Speclal rates on uppile B. SILLOWAY, Prop. DR. MCCREW THE BPECIALIST. s unsurpassed in the troatment of all PRIVATE DISEASES and all Weakness and Disorders of MEN 18 yoars experience. Write for eire:lae and quostio list free. 14th and Farnam Bts., Omabia, Neb. . CHEWING GUM, 'A VALUABLE SPE- CIFIC FOR LUNG & THROAT TROUBLES $80 A MONTH $A54RYA delay & 0 competent persans. . MEDO-ELECTRO PAD_ CO.. Cincinm L]

Other pages from this issue: