Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 11, 1906, HALF TONE SECTION, Image 31

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TirE OMAHA SUNDAY BF:E: NOVEMBER 11. 1306.
Historic Bellevue and Its Surroundings Revisited by the Pioneers
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VISITORS AFTER SERVICE) AT OLD CHUKCH,
lira. Orrno Allan Bradley. Mr. Bruno Twohuok.
Mrs. Jarae Allan.
THREB 07 THB PIONEER WOMEN.
rrom Ift to Rlht Dr. W. H. Beti,
Ha)(htm, 8. F. BurUxU, Mn. Wllllon Leach,
unw Alien eraaiay.
PIONESBaiS AT TUB OLD CHURCH
Mm. VT. H. Bt, J. Q. A. Oos. H. T. Clarkf. ir.. Mr
Chaffee. Mr. J. T. Allan, Judge Peter Uow, Aira.
Mr.
iO Jollier party ever loft Omaha, for
an afternoon outing than the sixty
or more Bellevue pioneora nnd
V 4J ' oecenilBnt who boarded a
(pecini rar or ine umnna k i,nun-
ell Hluff8 Street railway Saturday afternoon
Noveni'icr 3. for Ue-llevue, us special suesta
of thc street car company, to slstnnllie th
fortnnl opening of that new lntcrurban Una
from Omaha to the oldest whlto settlement
In Nebraska, bonnle Bellevtic. How well
Oenernl Manner Smith's kindness was an
jfc-e.elated was attested in the presentation
of a handsome, bouquet to him by the old
7Ulem .lust prior to the street enr leavlnj
rom Fifteenth and Farnam streets. Tli
i or started at 1:30 and having- the rigrht-of.
Viy made the run In just forty minute.
VThe adults composing the party and tha
dutes of their settling at Bellevuo were:
H. T. Clarke, 1S55; Judge Qosa, ISffl; Mrm.
J. T. Allen, 1S02; Mrs. Orare Allen Brad
ley, 1857; Mrs. Bruno Tzschuck, 1SZ2;
Mrf. Tony Tzschuck Qerbcr, lSH: Mrs.
Iena Tzchuck Meyeir, IS); Mrs. Mar.
Baret Dnl'on English, 1W2; Mrs. Dell
Prilton Mulvilhlll, 1S0O; Walter Lemon,
3R60; Mr. and Mrs. Wilcox, 1855; Georg
Wilcox, 1S56; Mrs. Georsre Wilcox, 1S76;
Mrs. William Leach, 1S57; Mr. and Mrs.
1 W. C. Mcljean, 1S67; Mrs. Arthur, ISM; D.
j D. Hall, 1S62; Mrs. Sllaa A Strickland nnd
Mrs. Knte Strickland Haynes; Al. Buttcr
fleld, 153; Mrs. Angle Harris, l&il; Mrs
Lucia Swain Campbell. 1900; Mrs. Julia
Oliver Eads. 1MB; Mrs. Margaret OUv
Hallam, 1S72; Augustus Clark, 1894; Faul
Gotszhman, 1856; Mrs. Thomas Hendricks,
1861; Emma B. Myers, 1873; Mrs. WU-
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PIONEERS AT BELLEVX.T0 COLLEQH
TuXCtrRSIONISTS AND THICIR CAR.
Ham Loach, 1867; Ralph H Hall, 1&57; Mra. down the river," said eue, "forty-flve or at the Bellevuei sawmill, In wWoh Mr.
Idalyn Gwyer Yatus, 1S57:. John Drexel, 1UU4VJ cr ago, and then would signal Clarke first engaged in merchandising. Mr.
1S56; Mr.. Susie Chllds and Mrs. Nellie oowa to the Mission uown there among Clarke kept store on the first floor and was established by
Peckham Womersley, 1856; Mrs. Bayley, tUB trees that the boat was coming. U lived over the store. The building still Trading company In 1810 or earlier, and at Not a vestige of the old agency buildings
1856; Mrs. Calls, Lane, 1X71. and Mrs. wu great times with us when the Boats stands, grimed with mors ttnd age, whllo the time of the settlement of Bellevue in or old mission buildings remains at Belle-
of
obta'ned, even after three of the most
eminent railway engineers of that time
had urged the building nt the brid&u ut
Bellevue.
Henry T. tlorUe'x Itt-mininrrnrea.
'It has only been within less tlian a year
and a hnlf," wild Mr. C'latke. that a s n.
tleman high In the legal counsel of tlie
Union I'aritic company told ine that the
1'nion Pacltic would have been JVM.OtK) bet
ter iiff today had the bridge been built at
Bellevue. and had the bridge been built
here, Bellevue today would have bee.i m
city of JOii.Oou people, with no competing
city within luO miles up or down the Mis
Missouri valley. I yet bullevo In the des
tiny of Bellevue, not as a great commercial
city, but as a city of suburban homes.
This day Is pregnant with old memories
and new hopes. I can look buck to ths
days of Logan Fontanelle, the great chief
of the Omaha Indiana, who had his hoius
on this very spot. He loved and was loved
by tho whites. He was honest and trua
and one of the grandest types of Indian
character I ever knew. I can also look
forward with the hope that while our early
dreams of a metropolis must vanish, yet
with the assurance that Bellevue wilt
awake from Its quietude and become, not
merely a suburban city of heautllul homes,
but a great educational center aa well.
There nre no better people in all the world
than the sturdy settlers of old Bellevue,
and their children Inherit all their traits of
Integrity, Industry and Intelligence. Flora
this very spot I have seen an empire rlas
which for the intelligence. Industry, wealthi
and high morality of Its people is un
til a slight eminence, stood the old Omaha Bellevue was the great tradinc Dolnt for Crook, on nf thl rrMt mtlltnrv nnnt.
Indian agency and trading post. Tbis post miles and miles up and down the river, the Unitod States, with tho trolley lino 1"aJled in tho world. Though I may b
tho American Fur both In Iowa and Nebraska. running to the fort from Bellevue. om ,n ye1- Bucn nours as uw
.j. ' makes me young again. Indeed. I ain not
Informal Service at Old Church. M- yu m dear old rlends and chlu
Plieehan. . i,n in tboaa years: It waa like a hull- short distance back of It Is the later 1855 the trad ng Dost was under charge of vue. excent the old church. However. After a visit to the collen. where an. oren oi my oia irienus, nennur arc you
To Mra. Grace Allen Bradley Is entitled onward sued the car again through built store room, which Is now falling Into "Peter A. 6arDV. Sir." as the old veteran Judge Gobs has in his nossesslon a rant other grouo Dlcture was taken, the visitors, today. Man Is but as old as he feels, ana
the credit for organising this vlelt of fc heavy cut and out Into the open, seventy- mm. Across the street from tho old store. Insisted on being called, with thj em-, made from the walnut board flooring of the under the guldanoe of the Bellevue com- It Is Just such occasions as these that maks
Omaha residents of old Bellevue to their flva fet ab(ve the Missouri, skirling the one of the first general stores In the state phasis on the "Sir." At this time. In 1S55, old agency building. mlttee, went down to the old Presbyterian us yun& opaln. Here were my children
old home, and on the way down Mrs. unoer the shadow of Bellevue codege, outside of the Indian trading poets, Is sit- about 1,000 Indiana had their village located , church, where an informal program was Dorn and nere ls wnere mV heart will eve
Bradley was omnipresent, her cheery, good there burst onto the view of the excur- uated the old Clarke homestead, a modest a short distance south of tho trading post, Early Settlers at Bellevue. held under the auspices of Pastor Phelps, be' ln dear' old and rejuvenated Bellevue.
nature reflecting Itself throughout the en- ,ionSts the glorious Papslo valley, and cottage, but In excellent repnlr. Along the along Papplo creek, with Logan Fontanelle Quaint old Bellevue ls fruitful of many 48 chairman and a committee of Bellevue
down there among the trees lay, quiet, two streets are many handsome maple and as their chief. The old settlers lived on romantic incidents that have entered Into wome- no program opened with singing
beautiful old Bellevue. The car stopped honey locust trees planted by Mr. Clarke terms of perfect friendship with the In- n-.ake-up ef Nebraska's earliest history. It "B,essed Be the Tie that Binds," ln which
here and a committee of old Bellevue cltl- over fifty years ago. dlans and traded with them for game. waa here that J. Sterling Morton first be- a" Jlnedi Pastor Phelps, after a brief In-
sens was in waiting to welcome uu- u r-ainer on aown rowers me river is ine ine great evanis oi xne aays wtrre, now- came a .NeorasKan. Here, too, waa the j , uyuu iuush j
tire party.
Dellghtfnl Hid to BellCTwe.
As the . far sped cn its way It was
Cider and Sociability.
Following the address of Mr. Clarke ths
visitors were Invited to partake of soma
excellent cider made from apples growa
greeted with cheers and "'". friends, keaded by Rev. Stephen Thelp.. old Hamilton house, that Is built on the ever, steamboat days. There waa no regu- home of Chief Ju-tlce Ferguson and a host ,Go88 ta 5ellver the forma' a''dresa of f;"?' " " m the BeHevu.
will from Omaha threugh t. Albright. Prea.yterlan church, site of the old Mission buildings. Hre, larecheduleofarrlvaldays.theboat.com. ef other ploueers of the old days whose "' Judge Goss snld In part: "Thl, .tf lv iSJh for tf 1
, where the Bellevue line turn, off f.th. cbJllrroall P.tw. 0f the fwn year, befere th frst migration of white Ing Just when they could and when the name. later became national. Here. ta te ,'mreIy ' reat da" ,n th" hiB ' ?rCha! ?"u"lrtZl
southeast, passing over gentle grade, and r.ptlng the c.mmonw.alth of settlors, wa, established the Presbyterian current and petulance of the old Missouri was one of the main crossing, of the Mia- Bsllevus. We are grateful for your visit to-s- Then . me ar .hour of more , of .oela
through great -cuts In the hills, by Ui. ' . legation from Bellevue mission under the ausploe. of tte Presby- wa. agreeable. It frequently happened that sourl for the argonauts of Oregon and fn Popularly rejoiced that we have at ni Tt (Tr s Amona th!
old farm home.tead. of tho P'"; cMt: n, vtoltor. diMmbarkM from terlan Board of Foreign Missions. Along the settlers were reduced to the direst California several year, before the first 'realized our dream of a railway direct who had not met .for ear Among th.
through bountoou. cornfield, pa.t the ' aftep hav(nK . abut Presbyterian church necessity because of the delay in the white settlement wi established. A. may t0 0ma Ver W,,lch we have "om9 "eS T! L mT
South Omaha Country oluK From nearly token ,y 1b ot 4rriva, of bt)aU. Food becime ex. well be ealll ..Hevue is in reality tne rea8n"ble -uranoo that we can go and a Ptonesr of 1865 now In h W year,
every farm house along the line haasker- , - njArt t.a k..,-. i .w. .... ..i a i.u- inv-,. . v,v..,. .. y come as we please and not have to wait J"dKe Go bear weight of years
... , , . . . .1 am, iii.n, vv. pkuni uuiBimu ... i,. 1.7 1 1 1 1 1. . , bu iiio vim t j m u .i,u u " . . vu.ivu vi a.;ivi nartx .
chief, were waved ln welcome to the ex
cursionlsts. "There Is the M home In
which I was born," was the occasional ex
pression of several of the party, "aad t
think we should live to see the day when
yelectrlo cars should run over the path.
hill to visit Bellevue college under the structure stands today as the oldest Pres- tlon to some of the less fortunate ones. Bollevue ls beautifully situated on
guldanoe of President Wadsworth. byterlan church ln Nebraska. There hax It was not an unusual sight to sea three plateau about sixty feet above the level of
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VUtttmjr Historic Spots.
been a considerable addition mode to the and
church on the west, but the old structure time.
Others strolled down Into the quiet old still remains as It was built over half a or months before another boat would be covered hills overlooking the broad Mis
. ...i , th. .. a town to get a glimpse of Its historic point., century ago. and ls still used for church Been, this being especially trua during the sourl vulley, the charming Papplo valley
wnere we used to anve me cows. Home . ,hMl. w. u, But bv H. services. winter seasons. and the Platte valley, .tretchlna- twelva r
1 glimpse of a familiar spot aad observe: T. Clarke, sr.. who was one of the first
"I killed a deer right at that copse of settlers of Bellevuo, coming In 15. and
rie. vr thr flftv v.ara .nd w. who .Mil has large realty holdings In and
used to hunt wild turkey, right down that ut th town. Passing down Main street
ravine and got lot. of them, too." Bud- re several buildings, gray with age, built
denly the car gave a quick swerve through ui h early day., among theai an old log
a deep cut. and a moment later the broad cabin, built before 1855, down nearer the
Missouri valley came ln view, with tho rlvor, but was torn down and rebuilt at
I Big Muddy flowing as placidly as it did It. present location a number of years ago.
fifty-two years age. "I'vs stood on the Acres, the street, a little further down.
M crest of that hill many a weary hour Is tho old store building, hnllt of eotton-
watching for a steamboat oon-lng up from wood boards sawed nearly fifty-years ago
A-
Interminable and uncertain hour. We are wltb tlie vBor of a man thirty year, hi
also glad because the completion of this Junior. He attributes his longevity to ths
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four steamboats at the landing at one the Mlseourl river. Just back of the town , T A , " u" olten- " " ' , - -
.... . . , . . ,. , ucib. u mo iuwn judg-e (3oSR Bpoke at some length of the giving influences that surround Bellevue,
And then again, It might be weeks there arises a series of grass and tree- ",. , T w"5. t., n f.- v..,. 1-
v.w MtM.j w v. i. . i .1 . ii til 1 11 l'l UIO UUllUlUg n n W n " " " " i " w W VWUl.Vj
of the trading post here ln 1834. Judge of Sarpy county.
Mrs. Grace Allen Bradley, who was born The average age of the old pioneers
ln the old Hamilton house ln 1867 and who present was 70 years, but for the day
was chiefly Instrumental ln getting up the they turned back the wheels of time fifty
excursion, responded en behalf of the vis- one years and were boys and girl, again.
Iters. She was followed by II. T. Clarke. At 4:30 the visitors bado their old friends
u. - iwiu o imwrsung story oi toe ana oMn.'ii guouoy m ino cnuron ana
fhi 68 .U I000 f early dajr ot Bea and how It was .tarted for the special car waiting for
The wTd J hUls lhenr,l. T hPd bV lta foun"' to bd UP here th, then,. More group pictures were taken,
mark th. ud XVir th. ? T me,0,"' of the Missouri valley, and how at the church, including a group of th.
mark the southern limit of the Platte val- this dream would have been realised but oldest pioneers there, and then csrne th.
4y. fUid on & clear da.v Plnrt xinmith ami t .. . . ... " . ..
very severe countenance upon the boy and .h., t K,,riinn. ' 7Z" . . lur.," nicancery ot certain parties ln sc. trip homeward. Tho "Bellevue Special"
winter seasons. and the Platte valley, stretching twelve or
With all the privations at Intervals, the fifteen miles to the south and then west-
AVhen Peter A. Sarpy Relsrned. settlement prospered. A ferry was estab- ward to the foothill, of the Rocky moun
At the southern extremity of the town, lUhed with the Iowa side of the river and tains. On the crest of the highest hill Is
located tho great Presbyterian college of
Nebraska's Oldest Veteran
IGHTY-SJEYEN years eld and past, man i. a member of G. O. Meade post No.
A Bunch of Short Stories
nikl Tl H I a. r la Hf Irian n l vrv novpr rnintMi- nrm 1 1 n r, n thm tinv and
OLONH, JOHN COSGROVB. aft- lid: "Touug man. hereafter when you rta T. Iy 3 Z 1, rid aV'Sm".!. Unl'.B n " ?T
erward congressman from the have anything to say about any one about ,hJ northwe.t p tho valley lies Fort mirln by wUc the vol J ff '7 "arrow Omaha was reached at 5 o'clock, afle,
Boonville district, was especially the boat, please except the cnptaln." "e8 ort mgln by which the vote for Omaha was Just half an hour's run.
Quarter of a Century in Railway Service
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distinguished as an advocate be- A few days latere wnen the captaJu hap
fore a Jury. Defending a client Penod to be on deck, the same cabin loy
accused of some crime, Colonel Cosgrove in carried past him a dish of food prepared
an eloquent climax shouted: for the table, and a pet hog. running be-
"What does the state's attorney expectT ,,vepn the boy's lega. upset him. .cattering
Doe. he expect my client, like Daniel, to tb iooA-
inciting uiiiiBeir up, witn a men rueiui
n,i .tm .. .m . h.n i,. ,.. i r .a a m v of th Hanubilc and is command the sun to .land still, and have up. wun a niori rueiu.
nd still as erect a when he cast 19, Grand Army of tho Republic, and I. countenance, the boy commenced berating
( fli-a. ..n, UTII... IT... n t K. mt,,r-A ,,nnr.tra nt lh, nrnnl. ODey . . ....
hi. first vote for William Henry one of the sturdy supporter, of the organ!
Harrison sixty-six year. ago. cation. He was bora ln Pennsylvania on
Judge James W. Praffo-n, lawyer for the
Fergus Potter McMillan of Sut- July 1 119. S"d when he got bis manhood opposition. Interrupted.
ton. Neb., seems to have drank from the
Fountain of Youth for fair. This fine old
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a-rowth stood six feet four inches in y lc Wease your nonor. ne said, aa-
helght. Many stories are told of hi. physl- dressing Judge James E. Haze.il, who was
cal prowess, one of them being that once on the bench. "I pbject to Colonel Cos-
In Ohio he cradled two acres of heavy grove', misquoting scripture."
wheat in one day, from sunup to sundown. "I bet" pardon." blandly replied Colonel
Thl. doesn't .ound big in the days of self- Cosgrove, "I forgot for the moment lint
hog. "You are the trlseraMfst hog I ewr
setm," he began, when, cntchlr.g a view of
the old man, and remembering his Injunc
tion, he added, "except the captain." ,
Tho boy has had a secure bc-rth on Cap
tain Llrch'. boat ever since. Boston Herald.
Training of a Politician.
TJCIAN W. WAKRI.ET. general
pasaenger agent of the Burlington
lines west of the Missouri river,
I. today celebrating the anniver
sary of twenty-five years of ser
vice, with the Burlington railroad. One of
the oldest native sons of the state, Mr.
Wakeley has worked ln most of the othnr
large cities along the Burlington and now.
at the culmination of twenty-five years of
When I was a very llttlo boy, writes Sir active service for the rond, he Is hack la
binders, but the older boy. on the farm. It was not Daniel, but Solomon, who cum- William Gregory In his autobiography, my the rlty where his parents reside.
whose memory goes back to the cradle mand.jd the sun to stand still.' grandfather, who was then under aeeretary Mr- "akcluy is the son of Judjre uid
days, can tell you It was a feat that few And that statement went unchallenged.'- for Ireland, took me to tho chief secrutary's Mrs. E. Wakeley of Omaha and was born
men can boast of having achieved. In 1862 Kansas City Star. room ln Dublin castle, and formally Intro- ' this state at tho early si ttlement of
Mr. MoMlllan enlisted ln the Thirty-fifth $ ducwd me to Lord Melbourne. De.-5oto, twenty miles north of OmaJia. in
Iowa and did his share toward, putting No Model (or llliu. After I had been wltb him fur some little lS; he Is i yes ot age, and has already
down the rebellion. He came to Nebraska r. Stephen II. Iloblln, pastor of the Co- time, he said: "Now, my boy, ls there :iny- given more than half of his life In the
many years ago. and has beeu a member lumln s Avenue L'nlversali.t church, Boston,- thing here you would like?" service of the Burlington road. Ho wn
of the Grand Army for a long time. At W4U c-iilllii on an old woman, one of his "Yes," I answered, pointing to a very educated in the grade and high schools of
Suttan he ls a familiar figure, and Is very parishioners, before goins away on his large "lick of sealing wax. O.naha and at the Military academy at
populur.
Pointed Paragraphs
summer vacution. when hia church la al- T hat s right, aald Lord Melbourne, "est t'olnt, to which he won an Hpuoint
ways closed. The old woman cvldcnt.y Psfl'ig on me a bundle of pens; "begli ment by competitive examination held at
does not believe lu ministerial vacations.
for e said:
lire curly. All these thhigs Lolonfe' to the me university in Lincoln In 1S77. In 1SS1
public, and your buainc&s must always be he entered the freight service of the Bur-
A minute today la worth
morrow.
Lend is about the only tiling railors have
to bnnk on.
Women who kiss each other are often
guilty of counterfeiting.
He ls a wise man who either speuks the
truth or rays nothing.
vac-tion,
"My dear madam," answered the dot
tor, "I never did believe in Imitating
sstan." Boston Herald.
and each is worse than the other.
If a woman laughs at a man's Jokes it's
becmipe he Isn't her hiiFhand.
Revenge as contemplated may be sweet,
but it is always more or less bitter when
rrallicd.
Almost any one can be a power for evil
hut It takes a man among men to b a
power for good. '
Only few men ar able to appreciate the
liunmr In a practical Joke that comes at
tbvm rolnt first.
When a mm attempts to interfere with
the afluirs of a womin the let h can get
Is th,- uiM of it
Ignorance of the law excuses no mm,
but it sixnntlincs accounts for the failure
of a lawyeir to make goud.
ati hour to- "Doctor, renumber satn never takes a l" B"1 "ul of U'e I'-' ' a '"-'-n you Hntton in Chicago. Promotions followed
consistently, and his successive positions in
the Burlington service are as follows:
In HS1, local freight agent at tlUcago;
In lfS", assistant to tlie general manager,
the lute Henry B. Stone; in l.cs8. assistant
general passenger lu-enl of lines eist; in
If:, genural p;issuer agent of Missouri
lines at St. Louis; in general pusaengvr
agent of lines west, Omaha. In Immediate
charge of the Burlington pj.senger business
W.
Foot Ball Enthusiasm.
J. Chthier, the teruns champion of
can." Pearson's Weekly.
He'd Work lor .ollilua.
Andre.w Camegio plays golf well, and
likes to talk about the game. Of one of
his friends a golf tyro ha said at a dinner
in 'New York:
'Blank went to jilay one 'l-iy, and, dis-
Every man has an excuse for drinkirg- America, slid at a dinner ln Pluladtlphla: liking the rather forward mai.ner of his
"Tennis ls all very well In its way, but caddie, discharged the iad and look another
what Is the excitement, what Is the en- In his place.
thuflasm of tennis compared to that of "The uiscr.ajged caddie. Intt-id if reilr- u'tw"'n the Misrourl river and the Pacific
foot ball? Ing lu a seemly manner to the c!ub house.
"Perhaps you have heard of that I'enn- hovered about Blank, lie retr.urfled closely Mr. Wakeley was married in 1XS7 to Helen
sylvania guard who. coming to at tho end t'1' man's rather clumsy m -thod of play. Louise Weeks of Wisconsin, and their fum-
and went.
"Blank chose a stick and swung fur a " older native son of this state.
long drive. But he mlbsel the b-il
of a foot ball game, whispered to the n nis freckled young face a sr.eer tame
physlcUn bending over him:
" 'Did we win, doctor?'
" 'Yes, hands down.' the physician an
swi red.
"The guard flushed with Ji y.
"'Never mind that fractured thigh. :nen
doc.' he said. "Juft f.ke throe br kn
teeth out of ny mcuth bo's I can holler."
Ily now cnflsus of thre sons. ' One must
search diligently around Nebraska to find
As geiw-ral pa-scaper agent of the Bur-
"The discharged c; dlie gave a loud Wusii. ""l-'l"n one of the chief works of Mr.
Wakeley has been In upbuilding the wet
and pv.itlng iotilem on the broad prairies
Fr.RC.rS POTTER M'MILLAN OF
tllV. N1J
iJiar.k irounea n tie l:iv u'.il inunr
gln mighty .wing bu. :tgi'i. he ml.s d
"There canie fro.u the c.nld.e a,ioihcr uf Nebraska.
loud, harsh laugh. A native ut this city. Mr. Wakeley Is al-
"A third lime Blank swung, and a third ways alert to promote the Interests of
time only turf and du.t rose into lh air. Omaha and never overlooks an opportunity
"'Hi. miuler.' veiled the .i.i.'.m. rl. i -. m ... -, , ... r..iu , .u .....
1, .mm., iin.. i,.J.,. .v.... .i.. 7 . " : . . ... ... - . . ----- - -'-- ... . i.ir oi.ue mai
. , " "-'"" ""7 """""'r Captain r.ircli of Lrdoucester overheard one iveiy. U you u take ine back 111 caary lh.y will benefit Omaha. The latest tinirt
who follows his calling too strenuously Is of ab boys indulging in animariver- our clubs for the fun of th. thim.-.' "- iid of the Burlington bears wllnj to
.....,.,...-A.1i.,u .lua. en me omcer. ana crew, lie turned a r u auiouio .xaa.
The Taptulu Excepted.
Passing the pantry of his boat one .Isy,
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X.UCXA- VArTEI.KX
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