Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 30, 1880, Page 4

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THE DAILY BEE. Mondfllcflng. August 30, ~ BREVITIES. —Paterson sells co —Fine perfumes at Saxe's, ~See Polack’s advertisement. —Butterick's patterns at Cruickshank. *orter is running the Omaha ferry. “ip and Tuck” st the Academy ext Saturday evening. 115 Parlsh echool co uas term of its third a nine defeated ray byascore Lands, Lote, k over Dem Bargains. —For on st the Omaha 100 have paid in ¥ ve members B othlack Br Farrue, Houres and Lands. Bewis' new column of bar- House, 9 roc pren W. Nasox. ms, cor. Barrabas parish school com- « the Christmas ter@ of its third mber 6. menc year ou Monday, Sep Devling Fall styles are now ready im at the Boston Clothirz 212 Farnhaw St. for inspe Houe The ice cream featival and socie- Bleof the Catholic Lilrary will take place to izt The musical part of the scc eble willbaof a £ haracter. There will b a meeting of the execu o comwitiee of the and Arhur club at Dnsmoore and pathic Willis eod-tf of the next There are tw in the ¢ Porifoli paper, anty jail. Major W. A. Fon will hereafter snoth- 1 semi-weckly. Taere 1 that suzcoeds like suce The and Arthu neat meeting of the Garfield r club will be held i Mu September &, at the . Wednesday even Hon. J. M. Thure- on will be one of ‘he speakers. Hon. John Gillespio is now map- an, 2 seats in the r the rep The ons will have seats by them various n, of the po: + vad the remaining furty to the Iufantry at White Rivec agency. l.tter proceedcd west on the waon train. wyed paseenger trains ar- ostorday, the wash ing repaired {0 The pas- ty-two hours sllow the passage « t the ins wsongars e it starvation to eve 50 per ; charzed for grub and poor weraon of limited means, named Nickerson, and Chica; who was arrested tted to the o aturday and sunty jail to await Jination on the charge of in . Tt seoms that he has been ar- rested before, bat for sowe reason was ot Satnrday hour his wife went to the court and swore out held in custody. atan e police @ warrant on the ground that he ws and had attamp three o to kill her two or bo showed her hand badly cat by her husband and said that on his return from duty he made an aeault on her a hatchet and qul for her little timos, prlw lunch, to-night, at Flan- ) lmhmn Hall, with a band of masic. A zood time is expected. Meals atall hours at'l smembor this fa izard's palace. Ye Politi- tto thay you save hours by taking the % is & Pacific B R Say you leave here Monday at 3:49 p. m , in Washington, D. C., 1:25p. m. Ticket corner of 15th au that bash, St. Lou the senior member ot the iy al committee of the Y i city this wmrning and will remuin over He has Loen a groat friend men, and has rejoiced in the 1o Men's re- 1d 1t evening Burnbam de for hold- agat the ca Laird, of Ju. a2d will furnish e music. o = , et af White's hotiice s e el ic2 meats call st Bath & market, opposite the post- a24e0ddt Houses and | * new column | Physicana aud Sur- | us Bluck, cor. 15th aud Mea’s | p Christian Associstion, arrived in |hu‘ THE CROWNING INFAMY, By the Aid of Proxies Purchased ‘With Union Pacific Gold. The Frauds of Thursday Last Are Endorsed By the Central Comittee, And Jug-Handle Harmony is Re-tored in Douglas County. Close of the Farce. publican county central committce 1 at 10 o’clock Saturday morn- A very large concourse of reputli- cans from the city and country was Before the committee met the prevailing impression was that in- present asmich as culy part of the wards and precincts_ kad out the prosramme cf registrationand the returns had ot all been Tec the smuittee would adjourn immediate- s and relegate the businers of look- itz into the credentials of members to Few wera aware had been managers carried the convention. that & scheme con- by the of P. faction to capture the con- ng the committes cocted the U vention by cony into a reterning board. When the roll was called fourtecn members responded, viz: Behm, Sim- Points, R Reed, Timme, e-al, Bloom, Donald, Cummings, fiin, Cole, Hiler, Corliss, Barber, | aad te ch ir nan, J. S. McCormick. TUE PROXY BUSINESS. Seven proxies had been procured, and were presented by the representa- tives of the U. and admitted, v’z : Harmon, proxy for Zimmerman; row xy for Fravk naed; Thurston, proxy P. rn Hitcheock, John M. H. Kyner, proxy for ection Boss Swn- W. Sieward, of Chicazo pre AN EXTIAO M. Lowis § luticn that the persons named on the list of city dele maha Republi atthe late primary, are hereby d lod to seats in the conven- EDENT. s published in The n as persons elected od enti tion, Mr. Ro what authority th sewater wanted to know by se persons were to ated in the convention. Under resolutions passed at the last the committee, sealed re- turns from cach ward and precinct were to be sent to the secretary of the ccmmittee to be here opened, that the persons named on his I'st had re- ceived a majority of the votes pollid and were therefore entitled to seats in the conventior, The sccretary has not opened any he roturns. The committce has no other knowledge of the election of these pretended delegates than a slip paper cut out of the republican, in the hands of Mr. Reed. To give these persons seats in the convention on such flimey evidence of their election and without henring the con- & would set an unheard of and . Reed defended his action on the ground that the republicans of {Omaha bad fsiled to endorse ation scheme. Rosewater—*“We admit that delegates from the Fifth and Sixth wards are rightfully entitled to their seals, but there are contestants in four war s, aud they ought to havea hearing before their cases are disposed Mvr. Thurston said that 21l the pa- pers in the city, including Tue Ber, had published the figures shoming that ozates named by Reed had re- alarger number of votes than and that the question of was 2 mere technicality. o resolation simply propesed to give cic seats in if there were [ thess del s oo, any contestants they c there. Mr. Simeral stated that he certait- {1y would object to tha resolation, b~ it was unfair to those who claim- e seats in the convention, and mno 21 been presented here that the parties in the list had been voted Juestion being on the adoption n Mr. Rosewater call- e ayes and nays, which result- follows: Mr. Harmon, aye; fr. Behm, no; Mr. Simeral, no; Painte, —. Mr. Poin's desired to explain his vote. He had started out carnestly es prima uld appear evala ed for Mr. Gilbert, no; Mr. | i faver of the registrationmovement. | Ho had faithfully done his duty of the esccutive com- to carry ont form. Tt was cvident that the re- publicans of Omaha had by a big ma- jority declared against it and he was willing to yi Ho therefore voted sa member mittoo age Mr. Bloom in explavation of his vote said, that in his opinion, a large majosity of the people of this coun'y, democrats and re- , were iu favor of registr, tion and reform at the primarics. Had thers teen su unbulldrzed and unbought expression of the voiers, a lican Lurge msjority would have o declared. His personal experience and obsers tion at the Third ward primaries was that scores of men voted at the poll opposed to registration that ‘were non-residents and demo- zats, and many were driven off by roughs and inimiduted by spalterr, from voting at the registry poll. thought the party could not afford to sct 80 bad a presedent as thi durse corrrapt voting and mob vio- | lence. He thercfore voted no. Mr. Hitchoock voted sye. Mr. Rosewater—Eversbody here kuows how Lam going to vote, bat T desive in explanation also o enter | my protest against this srbitrary | nroceeding. A faction opppoeed to registration have all along chargel that the executive committee and ® myself in perticular, intended to bee come a returning board snd award credentials to parties that wero not entitled to seats. All we had ever proposed was to give the tickets of ad. mission to delegates, after examining their crodentials and comparing them with the poll lists, ballots and regis- ter; and now this faction, opposed to registration, come in here with half a dozen proxies whereby forty-two dele- gates are awarded seats in the conven- tion without any other evidence of their clection than a scrap taken cut newapaper. T charged those parties at the last meeting with an attempt to buy up proxics from members of this commit- tee, and I now repeat that £75 was offered for aproxy to Mr. James Gil- bert, who sits right here, and I defy any man to contradict me. By passing this rerclution you prepose to close the doors against 28 delegates from four wards, whose rights to seats in the convention are attested by the fact that Unicn Paci- fic emissaries are trying tobuy their proxies. Last night Mr. E. K. Long, of the general passenger department of the U. P., procured the proxy of Julius Hansen, javitor of the South Omabaschool. If that delezation has no rights here why do they make such desperate cfforts to get their proxies. As the ori; or of this regisiration scheme, T herehy aseert publicly that T had no other des; an honest expressi of a 1 than to secure of the republican sentiment of this county. We had 10 such expression at the last prima- ries. Nearly one-half of the repub- lican ers did not dare to vote, Hundrods of men turned away from the polls because they did not wish to be put on a black list by spotters. The vote giyen to the opponents of registration was largely made up of democrats and imported voters. There way be some about the ad- wission of the Fourth ward de tion, but T waintai vote pelted by the cred republicans of the Second ward represented the majority. Ta that ward voters were brought to to the pells by lead m. saloon keepers with the that it «juestior: nstruc o 5o difference whether the men were demwosrats, repub- licans or non-residents. Tt was an casy thin vote at to get alarge the polls, where cverybody al'owed to vete. You stand al- ready on a rotten foundation, and by adopting this res the way to was lution yon prepare at the November elections” You may pass muster at this tribuval, but there is a supreme tri- bunal that will pass a verdict at ihe mber el when all the votes will be putin one box whers spotters cau't cperate and where the voter Is surrounded by the s'rong arm of the law. ed no. MecDonsld, ineviable diswter aye; Mr. Cum- . Thurston exoressed bricfly his approval of the resclution, and said the talk about bulldozing and bribing was too (lda He voted ay, Mr. Reed Mr. Kyner, aye; Mr. . mo; Mr. Allen, M iliss, aye; Mr. Hiler, Griftin, aye; M imme, #ye; Mr. Sampson, aye; Mr. Baurber, 2ye. Fifteen voti six in the n dlared the 1. aye; in the aflirmative and tive, the chairman de- olution adopted. The country members, whose cre- dentials were not disputed, were then declared catitled to seats, which com- pleted the farce and fraud. the convention by on from their Setsmal every chanca of a fair hear- ing, the U. P. strtkers went cut of the room rejoicin. STEPHENS AND WILCOX'S STOCK. An oppornunity is now offered to the public to obtain dry goods at pri- nevir before known in the west; we purchased the stock which cost 8, W. over al 80 cents ox THE DOLLAL, and we are closing it out at a trifling advance above what we paid. We trust 1hat no one will fail to avail themselves themeselves >f the unueual sacrifice. olate firm’s reputation for sterl- y and thorongh reliability, coupled with our assurance that the stock is the bestin the west, will be a tarantee that the goods are st known standard quali- has been marked far No dry goods house in the country cancompete with 1t will pay richly to au- next year's wants and pur- chase from us now. We would call nostey, SILKs, UNDERWEAR, FLANNELS, Norions, and all houtckeeping goods, towels, naplios, ote.; marked down. Ttwould be impossible to quote one and all vincing argument to any intending to Al goeds warked in One price to all, S. P. Mogs & Co. parchase. ures, BANKRUIT prices, but investigation willbe a con- | UNDER THE WAVES, The Waters of the Platte Rise Over the Union Pacific Track. Proud of the Plattsmouth Bridge, The wachout at Warren's Siding on the Union' Pacific, thirty miles east of North Platte, which was reported Fri- day, proved more serious than wasat first supposed. The Leavy rains of the past few daye had, it appears, caused quite a rise in the Platte, and the roadbed iu this locality was close by the river bank, and through the low, bottom land. The overflow submerged the track for two or three miles, it is said, and of courss put astop to the passage of trains for a time, resulting in a gener- al blockade at points east and west of the break in the line. At midnight Friday there were lying at North Platte,”the overland f{rein due in Omaha at 3:25 p. m. Friday, and that due at the same hour to-day; also two emigraut trains, two tea trains, four etock trains andsix freight traius. At Willow TIsland, this eide of the inundated track, were the west bound paseenger trains which left Omaha Wednesday and Thureday at p. m. {with about an equal num- ber of freights snd mixed traina. It was not until 11:45 Saturday that trains began moving The all-absorbing topic of interest at Pla‘tsmonth now is the new brilge of the B. & M. and ¢, B & Q over the Missouri. The first train, an en- uine and twenty-six cars, was run out oofthe structure Thursday to bold it down whila holts were secured in place, but the erossing of the bridge by trains, for the test, will not take place till Monday. The Courantsay:: A wreat mavy of our people would ke to know when the final doings ) to for a certainty, and it is respectfully sugsested that a few bills bo printed and cir- culated with the desired information. There is no question but the structura is as complote as stone aod iron can make it, and a compliment to the builder, Mr. G. S. Morrison, chicf engiveer of the railroad. The bridge at Omaba when compared to it is but a playthi This will never be out ut repair =t weaken from the first day of its use, while the one at Owmaha is accur in more or less danger, owing to the iron cylinders in the water, upon which the bridge is founded. With the convenience of this bridze and the new hotel, travel will be greatly increased through Plattsmouth ” EBRASKA LINE NEWS, The Sioux City Journal of Thurs day says: The steamer Benton croseed six flat cars to the Nebraska shore yesterday, which, with the ten widened cars of the old narrow gauge rollingstock now on that side, will constitute the con- struction train that will begin track- laying on the Omaba line to-morrow. The St. Paul barge has been repaired, and will be launched to-day. Some thirty additicnal flat cars willbe cross- ed this barge and reinforce the con- struction train. When these addi- tional cara are crossed one train wili be lo-ded with wmaterial, while the other i ot !¢ front laying track. Con 1t e b, for so long commander of the v'd narrow gauge train, will have charge of the Ponca train when i on September 1. A train load of lamber, to be used in building a tauk and round house st Covicgiton, and in buildiug depots along the road, is waiting in this to be crossed to the Nebraska side. T. A. Christy will have charge of the cary ihose betterments. Tu anl wdof a deliy on the truck Lying «f the Omaha line is from (ha bridge builders, who are too few in number for the amount of bridges to be putin. The company stands ready to employ all the carpen- tera that offer. The line of the Sioux City aud Ne- braska will bs completed to Omaha by October 1st. rtor warl TAKE NOTICE! That the excursion train to Plattc- mouth on Sunday will leave the B. & M depo 9 w. and will return about 7 p. 1 “Pickets for the round trip are 75 ceats for adulls and 25 cents fir children. Refreshments, fine scenery, oxcel- lent music and a general good time will bo the order of tho day. 2712 IK\\lxclnerl‘XLural Atuf'lnl\lmuulh to-morrow. Everyhody will have an portunity to sce the new B. & M. ilroad bridge at Plattsmouth—the in will run to tho bridge. ~ All per us attending the veteran excursion norrow will recoive a free ticket to o to be given at tho Tivoli to- morrow evenin to: Plums, Peaches, P Grapes, Oranges, Lemous and Apples, at Tizard's p: Aregu meeting of the Plasterer union will be held at Turver Hall on Tuesday, the 31st, at 7:30 p. m. A full attendance is requested. Why dose _ourselves with nauseat- Ing mediciues, when a purely frait cathartic will cure you at once—Ham- brrg Figs. Try them. EXAMINATION OF TEACHERS, I will be present at my ofiies in ofeach month to cxamine such ap- plicants as may desire to teach in the public scheols of Douglas county. Quarterly examinaticn first Satur- day in February, 3lay, Aug B Co. Supt. Pub, Tnst. £3d 8-e-m-eow-tf e O he ouly train ita passen: | gers the beuett of the Horton Reclin- g Chair Cur Free, is the Wabash, St. Louis & Pacific Railcoad. Ticket of- fice, No. 1,502, corner 15th and Farn- | ham, augl9-d1m Hamburg Figs 25¢ a box, Wanted—A first-cless photograph printer and toner at the Beo Hive Photozraph Studiz, 213 Sixteenth | street, Omaha, Neb. a8 Frepared spice corned beef, very nice for lunch at a24coddt Bara & Warre's. M A case of const:pation by asing Fambnrg Figs Only 14 hoars to St. Lonis, via the Popular Wabash, St. Louia & Pacific . R, Leaving Omaha at 3:40 p. m , you take supper in an elegant dining | | car (meals 75c} retire to your sleeper | and awake for breakfast in St. Louis. Lusury on wheels. Ticket office, No. 1,502, corner 15th and Farnhar. sugld-dlm | ders, | James E. Boyd, Hon. Cen Gallagher, a Guard's Hore and Coat Ard Breaks for Tall Timber The following account of the escape of a convict from the Nebrazka state’s prison is reproduced from The State Journal ot only for its interesting character, but. with the possibility ir view of its endipg in the capture of the bold buccaneer: About four months ago George W. Cole, a Unifed States prisoner ftom Colorado, found guilty of stealing postege stamps, etc., was put in the Netraska penitentiary, to serve a one year'ssentence. George has behaved himee:f in a very gentlemanly manner since his confinement, and only having about seven months to serve, the pris- on offlcials deemed him a *‘trusty,” and locked upon him as & man who would not run away, even if he had a good chance. But the prison officials reckoned without their host, and nov- er even asked George if he would sc- cept of his liberty if he had a chance. Last Thursdey George was out in the hay tield on Mr. Stout's farm, a fow miles from _the “pen,” in charge of a guard named John Maxwell. He worked hard during the day and to- wards evening, eay about 5 o'clock, he became tired and desired a little equestrian «xer-ise. Observing. that the gzuard was away from lis horse, one of the flectest animals in the country, and that the guard’s coat was in the saddle, he straightway mads for the horee, and putting on the guard'scoat, mounted and waving his cap, shouted, “Good-bye, boys, I am scrry, but I lave to leave.” The guard who seem- +d to be paralyzed for the time hei Tecover«d consciousness just a3 G wes going over the hill, and this is e last seen of the postage stamp thief of Culo A large number of the prison cf cials and a score or two of our cili zons were on the {rail yesterday. At a late hour last night trace of him and his flect steed was heard of in the vicinity of Bithop's farm. 1¢s barely possible that ho may take to the main roads a'ter a while, and for this reason we publish the fol- 1wing graphic description of George, taken from the prison descriptive roll. do. The man who ca‘ches and returns him to tha prison will ba entitled to fifty dol'wrs. Heres the description: “No. 21, U. S, Colorado, Juns 21, 1880; name, W. Cole; crime, receiving stolen postages stamps; dis- t-iet court Col. rado, term, May; sen- tence, one (1) yes e, 34; cccupa- tion, farmer and miner, “heighth, six feot 'one and one-fourth inches; foot, eleven and one-fourth inches; com- plexion, rather light; light brown hair; lisht blue eycs; born in Lansing, Michigon, ha lived in Colorado twelve years; hasno wife; parents’ postoflice, 8¢, Louis; Curtig A, Cole, father, in Gratiot county, Mich ; children, none; 1 member of no church; has fem. perate habits; can tead and write: aays he ias goilty; has a brother named Evgene Cole living at Black Havwk, Gilpin county, Colorado; back teeth gone on the lower left jaw; croaked front teeth on lower jaw.” Tx Wasan, $7. L & b R, R, $. Louts, Aug. 18, '80. § Frank E. Moores, Ticket Agent, Cmaa, Neb : Dan Siw sell ronnd trip tickets to St. Louisand retitrn, to itizons wishing to attend the grand OFFICE, ‘% from Omaha. Commence selling August 22, and maks tickets good until PAugust 28, 1850, Geo. H. Daxtets, T. Agent. H.T. Towssesn, G. P. Agent. aug 19dtd clave of the Knights of Pythias at | ¢ Notice, A special meeting of the republican Campaign club is called for Monday, August 30,3t 8 p. m. By order of the president, Bexy, Furrox, Sacretary. Always fresh oysters at Tizards tz’s fish mar- Mra. Rich wishes to announcs to the putlic that she has recently refit- ted her, boarding house, 211 14th strect, and is now thoroughly prepar- od to accommcdate hosrds. We com- mend her house to the public, as being first-cluss in every respect. OYSTERS, COFFEE AND CHOPS will be served during the season in Joe & Sam's elegant Parlor, commen- ciog Soptember 1. The best cooks and most attentive waiters will be ever found at this popular resort, 15th strec’, next door to postoffice. Open every night until 1 a. m., Sundays ex- cepted. NOTICE Notice 1s hereby given that I will not pay any debts contracted by my wife, 1. La Chapelle . 28 5t E. La Cuarguie. ~ SPECIAL NOTIGES, T NOTICE Advordaomonts To Lot For salo Lost, Found, Wants, Bosrding &c., will be fu- serted In these colummng once for TEN CENTS per lino; each subsequent Insertlon, FIVE CENTS The frat lusertion never less than | 4 giel fo 5 to R Tros part cash. SV\ TED nbirens B 055, s ANTED—Room and I andwite. Addess T W fesn in this city Aadrus W, Lee taks half interest in well established bt th the present prop:ictor e 3512 ONEMILLIONACRES CHEAP LAND N EASTERN NEBRASKA, $2T0$5PER ACRE. 20,000 Acres N DOUCLAS COUNTY, 6 to 12 Miles from Omaha, 86 to $10 per Acre, on Long Time and Low Interest. Large tracts saitable fo= Cclonies in all the best Counties in the State. 80,000 acres through lowa. A large number of Improved Farms in Nebraska, many or them near Omaha, $12 to $40 per acre. scattered _An Immense List of OMAHA CITY PROPERTY, Consisting of Elegant Resi- dences from $3,000 to $ 000. Many vacant lots in the additions to Omaha. Hundreds of lots scattered through the City. Houses and Lots, Business Houses and Lots, and all kinds of Ciy Real Estote. We also have MONEY TO LOAN on Improved Farms in Doug- las County, on 5 years time, at 10 percent. interest to all who can show good titles. M Counties for swt, Boggs & Hill, Reac EstaTe Brokens, 1408 Farn. St., Omaha, deb. 20 acres of & HILL. 1o clear aml grab by BOGCs & miLL. wuient to business, with New resldence, §15. BoaGs & B0GuS & 1L - BHeadquarters tor Joo Schlitz's Milwaukee beer at Mercuants' Ex- caaxer, N. E. Cor. 16th and Dndge. Kegistravion Notice—Fourth Ward State o NEBRASKA, | Douglas County. § % Notice is hereby given to the elec- tors of the Fourth ward, that T will sitm tho store «f E. Wyman, Fif- tecuth street, three doors south of the e, on Monday, September 6th, to make the annual list of voters of said also to preparoa list of vo- ters for special cily election, to bo held September 14th, 1880, postofi my hand this 25th day of August, A, D., 1880, Jonx Woob, Registraf. s Michael Davitt in Omaba. Michael Davitt, the Irish patriot | 7o and originator of the Irish National Laud League, arrived In the city Sat- urday morning at 10 o’clock from the south and registerod at the Creighton House. Saturday night he was given a grand reception at the Academy of Music, which was filledto overflowing with the sons of Erinand other sym- pathizzrs witha down-trodden and op- pressed nation and its bistoric race. The stage was handsomely adorned with the Stars and Stripes and the Green flagof the Emerald Isle. In addition to the distingaished orator of the evening, the stage was occu- pied by Mayor Chase, Senator Saun- ex Senator Hitchcock, Hon. Gen. O'Brien, Geo. L Miller aud oth- ers. Ta feont of the stage sat the band of the Ancient Order of Hiberni ans, who furnished excellent musib at intervals during the evening. Hon. James E Boyd was chosen chairman and introduced Mr. Davitt in a brief and appropriate speech, and the latter spoke for nearly an hour concerning the land movement and the past avd present sufferings of his people. He was listened to with decp attention and greeted with frequent and hearty approbation in the shape of applause. Hon. John Rush, Senator Saunders, P. W. Hitchcock, Gen. J. C. Cowin, and Rev. John Williame, each made short but excellent speeches in re- sponse to calls. The mes:ing edjourned with three cheers for the orator and the cpuse and country he represented. Tu witness whereof I hercunto set | THEU. & Cor. 16th and 3. FOR RENT—At Dayen: ‘wenty to twenty-four quarts or one doilar by Jobn T. F aulson. bk M € been seen nor ore a brown v Fuu A FING estwnaue trout, Mantle, St POWDER Absolutely Pure. Made from Graps Crevm Tartar. preparation makes such light, flaky hot breads, No othe oF luxurious patry. Can be eatea by dypeptics it fear o the ils resultiog from heavy in- i cans, by all Grocers. Rovax Baxtxa Powose 0., New York house, & rooms, with Tot, 43x152 tabar BOGGS & HILL, JOR SALE— cres JOR SALEComner half of lot 8. W, Cor. 15 dnd Tickson 3t & saer district bonds at a fair LOUGS & RILL. W 210ts west of Odd Fellows Block. BOGGS & HILL. f;olu\!.z- nproved farm near harracks. BOGGS & MILL Houso and fall ot Ve ster one of the best locations n the city, S & HILL. —We are now prepared to m $100 Taonthty pasimentes Pice 310010 BOGGS & HILL, 5, block 6, Shinu offeraton e forone or BOGGS & HILL. }I SE AND HALF LOT—Near Thirtesnth and Capitol avznue, $1. 0GOS & HILL. 9 $ BESTLOTS —In Skinu'a addition, §900. 506G and HILL. HALF LOT—On Dolgs ger's ware room: Faroham streots must te sold this month tor wEat it wiil bring i cash. BOGOS & HILL Owrer . hange for first class business EOGGS & HILL. AGANETo sty wit, il ee | Lo Tenth street, south of depot two blocks. 81,500 for both. BOGGS & HILL. = CHOICE, wru,On Park Wil Aveoue, lol') homy“nlhh‘.u 8500 10 3600, athy pa JUST TIIV. Immense Stock for SPRING AND SUMMER Fine Custom-Made CLOTEING Men’s Suits, Boys’ Suits Children’s Suits. SPRING OVERCuATS For Men, Boys,and Children. Toar, Hats s and Valiso Priees to Suit A ax ¥FPOLAC aps, it Fag-— eenth !1 WINDIW S 53% ..J e .‘ = Jy’;,:i £nis J.B-FRENCH& CO GROCERS, OMAH A ORCHARD & BEAN. | CARPETS OMAHA. ’ DEWEY & STONE, FURNITURE, OMAHA 50,000 DOLIT.ARS CHEAP! CHEAPER! CHEAPEST | MAX MEYER & BRO. Propose for the next ninety (90) days to sell their entire stock of Diamonds, Watches, Jewelry, Clocks, Silver-Ware, Pianos & Organ AND GENERAL MUSICAL MERCHANDISE At Manufacturing Prices, Which is from 15 to 20 per cent. below any Eastern Wholesale House, preparatory to moving into their weN Store, Cor. llth & Farnham We Mean Business, Come SHEELY BROS. PACKING CO,, PORK AND BEEF PAGKERS Wholesale and Retail in FRESH MEATS& PROVISIONS, GAME, POULTRY. FI CITY AND COUNTY ORDERS SOLICITED. OFFICE CITY MARKET--1415 Douglas St. Packing House, Opposite Omaha Stock Yards, U. P. R. R. TELEPHONE CONNECTIONS. and be Convineed, 1, ETC. GIT UP AND GIT! NO OLD STOCK Having Taken tb» Akove for Our Motto, Woare Descrmined to Offer Our Entire Summer Stk of CLOTHING AND FURN:SHING GOODS Regardless of Cost. In Order to Make Room for Our Fall and Winter Gre e, We Will Not Be Undersold. BOSTON CLOTHING HOUSE, A2=21<= FARNHAM STREET. T2W= CHARLES SCHLANK. SOL. PRINCE. LANGE & FOITICK. OOOK“”§TOV S House Furnishing Goods, Shelf Hardware, Nails and Ete, 1421 Farnbam Street, 1st Door East First National Bank. TO THE TRADE. Having just opened an entirely new line of MEN'S FURNISHING GOODS, We would agk the Merchants of Nebra spect_our feeling confident we can meet the wants of all in good Gocs rices SHREVE, JARVIS & €0, Cor, 14th and Dodge Sts, A /

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