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e e 6 E ——— COUNCIL BLUFFS. Matters of Moment Trans- piting in Towa's Metropélis, Happenings of the Day Put in Readable Shape. The Result of the Republican Convention. Commencement Exeorcisos 1 Other Live Topies and night and last work The commencement closed the hool closed it well. proxies be admitted, brought on a spirited stroggle and the thérmometer of political heat tapidly rose into the nineties. Mr, Baldwin finally with drew his motion and the comvention closed harmoniously The high school commencement was woll attended, and passed off nicely last evening. Al acquitted them selves handsomoly. We regret that the exercises closed to Iate to give a report. We clip the following from last evening's Globe concerning the Fair. view cemetery, of which we had ocea- sion to np.:i yestorday: “‘In view of the nearness of Fairview cemetery to the heart of Council Bluffs, its in- adequacy to meet the wants of a grow- ing city like ours, (there only being some twenty acres therein); the cor | tainty of ‘more extensive grounds Sighty new aspirants | yeingtneeded in the future; the liabil for life's honors and cares have been [ty of the health of our citizens being turned loose upon society. The su- | oy dangerod by exhalation andidrainage perintendent and teachers will now | fron the old ¢ and the pros take a much needed rest and all will got ready for another year of earncst l-u'tt'l{‘ pects of interments therein being en- Jjoined by the courts for the reasons school life and school work |above stated, some of our citizens arc Officer & Pucey have repaived and | taking initiative steps looking to the vefitted the several offices owned by | purchase of mnp\w and “suitable them. Professional mem-Jike a nice, | inds, either adjacent tor Walnut 1ioat place in which to transact Inisi- ness as well as bankers, and duly ap preciate liberality of landlords Real estate is advancing. Lots in some localities have doubled and tripled in price since March. The de mand is chiefly for property on the bluffs or h ground, Rents of dwellings have also advanced but few are to be had at any price. He was loaning against a teleg pole on Main street. He was appar- y about fifty, tall and comely, but ody, saliow and careworn; the conius_ still lingered onhis in hiseye. He might have aph fire of brow a been once a professor or a senator or a—a —editor. He held in his hand a newspaper, in which he seemod deep- ly absorbed. 1t was Tur Bee. His lips moved. We drew irresistably near and heard in murmured cadence sweet and low: “How doth the little busy Ber Improve each shining hour; And gather honey all the day From every opening flower." “T'll subscribe for the Ber,” and he smole a placid smile. E. D. Godfrey, special agent of the U. S. znaion bureau, was in the city yesterday on important business, Ground was_broken yesterday for the eroction of J. J. Brown's large brick block on South Fifth street. The Mueller building, on the same street, is being pushed rapidly for- ward. Groneweg & Schoentgen will begin thé extension of their building in a few days. Mr. Gallagher is now in Texas but is expoected to return shortly and will immediately begin the erection of his mammoth block on Fourth street. Several brick build: ings aro in_contemplation on Broad- way. Inabout & month the heystone Manufacturing Co. will begin their four story building, 76x100 foet, near the C,, B. & Q. depot, and. thus the cheery bustle goes on. Xinx says, ““Only just the signs of the times.”" It seems the two names given by the counterfeiter, whose: arrest wo ro- ported yesterday, were both aliases, his true name is now given as Dell Smith, and he is reported to be an old hand at such bad businoss, The broom factory, on Sixth street, is now running with its improyed ma- chinery. This machinery was made at Syracuse, N. Y., and is the firat of the kind that has baen set up west of the Mississippi. Tt is capable of turn- ing from 2,000 to 3,600 brooms per woek. The huge sewing machine makes one Tundred stitches per min- ute. Making brooms by steam 15 an exceedingly mwwllinq operation, The regular monthly examination of teachers will oceur to-day at the county superintendent’s oflice. Good sized now potatoes were pliced on the market by our market gardener yesterday, They retail for G0c per | pec! P. T. Mayne left for Oromwell yes- terday on businoss, but will return ‘again on Monday, ““Prof. A, E. Clarendon has returncd to his home and family in this city, where he will remain during the sum. mer vacation, Twelve rogular passonger trains ar- rive and départ from Council Bluffs daily besides the Union Pacific trans- | fer trains, Ogcar Knos's new residence on Sixth street will be completep and ready for occupancy about the lst of July, The funeral of Horman Boesche took place yesterday at the appointed hour as pet announcement. gore- monigs wére condu by the . Odd Fellows, of which r «Lu-nd was @ t member. An_unusually concourse of carriages and poo- were in attendsuee, in| i esteem in which the d. 35 m by his follow , townsmen. funeral train was . pregeded by the band playing a mournful dirgo and the entire ceremonies were' sol- emu and beautiful, fi. ramains were interred in Fairviow cowetery. The sickness now prevailing in cor- tain localities, though not serious ean probahly be remediod or obviated by ceasing to drink well water. Fil- tered cistern water is the safest, and far the most wholesome water to drink in this locality. The county republican convention wet at the ocourthouse at 2 o'clock yosterday afternoon and was called to order by John W, Baird, chairman of the republican county central com- mittee, Hon. W, F. Sapp was chosen chair- man and Mr. Rogers secretary. Eli Clayton, T. P. Treynor, George F, Wright, J. H. Swanson and J. T. Evans were appointed on credentials, J. C, Adams moved that a delegate from each township and one from cach ward, to elect its own delegate, be appointed, This motion produced a clash of in- terests and a war of words. The mo- tion was amended by Mr. Baldwin that the chair appoint & commit- tee consisting of one from each township and one from each ward to select delegates, and finally passod in that form, following delegates were selec- 1 Jacob Sims, W, ¥, S p, Johu Lindt, Geo, F. Right, J. T. Baldwin, 4.0, Bvaus, d. 5. Rand, H. O, Stith net, E. A. Consigney, B. F, Clayton, i e b B 4 , Jas. Amos. W. Ly- X m‘:m?mimn that no Soma emetery or at some other unob- [ jectionable place of sufficiont cipacity and in some of the picturesque locali | tics with which the city is so abund antly surroundod, as will meot the wants of the city for the burial of the dead for all time to come.” MEXICO. Gonld's Bitter Disappointment in the South, Special Dispateh to the Tribune New Youk, June 21.—=There has been a great deal of exeitement on the streets to-day over the rumor that the Gould-Mexican schemes were bad- ly involved, It soems that when the Atchison, Topeka & BSanta Fe and Denver & Rio Grande wore engaged in their fight that Jay Gould assisted: the latter road, belioving that ho could capture it and its valuable Colo- rado, New Mexiean and Moxican fran- chises. When the fight ended he wasthe owner of a third of Rio Grande stock, and he madea desperate effort to break the market and got enough of the floating stock to- get control, This plan was balked by the shrewdncss of General Palmer, and, as a_result, ho found himself with Russell Sage, at the close of the contest, the owner of less than a ninth, Still undaunted, though sorely dis- apoointed, Gould then directod his attention to Mexico, trying to obtain special subventions and _concessions, 1In this he utterly failed. When Gen- eral Grant returned the railroad king saw a chancs to try again, and after much negotiation he emploged the ex-president to go to Mexico, and on the ‘strength of his reputation and influgnce, with Senor Romero, - make a second attem gain the doncessions which wore . de- sired. Grant's first move was t6 as- socinte Romero with him in the onter- prise, believing that his name would carry great weight, Unfortunately for the scheme, this did not prove to bo the case. Thore was doop jealousy and much suspicion of Grant” on the part of the Moxicans and in associat- ing Senor Romero wish him, he made a great mistake. They at onco as- sumed that Romero had been bought to work against his country, and he was gonerally denounced: by the Mexican papers. - When = Grant went there he was (cooly but politely roceived, the most marked feature of his reception being the ut- ter wbsence of cordiality, Everybody seemed to be watehing his movements, and when he amade the ‘ propositions and roquests which Gould had quested him to make thoy were promptly refused, Gon. Geant is not a good deceivor, and when he first reached Now York, he made no secrot of his disappoint- ment. At once the market ‘on%the Gould - Moxiean seonyities dropped, and a gencral distrust 'was | aroused, Alarmed at this, - Gould sent him o request to say that no subventiens had been asked for, and it is stated that this request mwore than any interest the may feel in the Conkling matter, has prompted the many interviews he has submitted to of late, On the market, and among well- jinformed men on thestreet, there is a general impression ' that the Gould syndicato will bo very seriously em- barrassed by the Mexiéan failures It wis rumored | yesterday that Gould was buying bnci Un:ou Pacific, Sepew—— How to Build a Levee,, | The mode ot building a lovee which suporseded the primitive stylo just described is this: The space which it is to occupy is fiest carefully cleaned off; trees, roots, stumps, logs, waeds, even grass and leaves, are removed. Thaulin the middle of the space, ex- tending longitudinally the whole length of the proposed work, is dug a ditch threo foet wide and three foot deep, which is to be straightway filled up again, This is called a mock- itch, or, as some people say, a “‘muck-ditch,” but why “‘muck” is ono of tho things tha has not, yet boeen found out. The object of - this is twofold —to close all root-holes and to mortise the superstructure in the natural earth, thus preventing any sliding under the pressure of the water. As tho levee is built of loose earth, its mass coalesces with the looss earth with which the wock-ditch was filled, and when the lovee has been completed and settled, it forms, with the eontents of the mock-ditoh, & howmogeneous anchored three foet all along the line in the solid ground. The next process is to build the lovee, The material is to be taken only from tho outside, or side next to the river, aud should not bo cut nearer than twenty foet from the base of the levee; the earth is carried in wheol- barrows upon run-plank. The dimen- sions of levees have varied from time to time, according to the amount of funds available for their construction. In any caso, the top of the levee should be three feot perpendicular above high-water mark; the base line should be five, six, or seven feet, according to the ratio in forge, for ev ery foor of porpendicular height; the top should | be lovel, and as broad as the levee is )u¥: Thus, where high-water mgrk is u‘:::llwt ub&:'o the level of ‘the nat; bank, the dicular height of the Tovea should. b sevan feck, dhe th at the top shiould be seven I!wt, and its thickness ot the bottom: thixty-five feet, forty-two feet, or fortgenine feet, as the ratio of five to ope, six te one or sevem” to ofie (might be n forge Tak- ing, 5 for illustrpbion, © A seven- foot Jovee contructed upon this last ratio, it will be observed that, with the water, standing four feet deep, there will'be on a horizontal line twenty-five feet of solid earth between the surface of the'water outside and the air inside, and forty-nine feet be- tween the bottom of the water without and the air at the natural surface of the earth within, The last bub indispensible step in the process of |.-w-.-.bumml; is the “geop-water”’ dikch, which is dug some thirty or forty feet from the inner margin of the levee, and parallel with it. The function of this ditch is to receive and conduct away the the seep- water, or transpiration-water, which 0ozos in considerble quantities through even the most compact of levees, If permitted to remain 1t would render | the ground about theyinner base of | the levee imtolerably muddy, and woilld operate as a great disadvants in case of emergency, 'Thé seep- wate: ditch must be connected”with planta tion ditches or otherwise . put into communication with the | swainp in the rear] 8o that the water can be carried away. Finally, as n finishing touch to the new (levee, it sheuld be planted with Bermuda grags, If tufts of this grass be set two or three feet apart all over the surtace of tho levee it will, in a year ortwo, cover it completely with a very dense sod, and by its interlacing roots add materially to its water re sisting capacity, When water stands for a long time against a levee, the current and the waves seriously abrade its surface, cutting it sometimes so deep that an inopportune wind storm would assuredly break it. A heavy coat of Bermuda sod is a very efficient proventative of this kind of disaster. have seen at the end of a long per- iod of high water, a long piece of levee deeply indented all along the line, and in gome places, cut more than half through, while adjoining it was a mitl. of Berinuda covered levee, sub- tothe same exposure to wave, W tuft of grass,—{From an illustratod articla on “The Lovees of the Mis- sissippi,” by William L. Murfrec; Sr., in Scribner for July. How often persons have been annoyed by burrs clinging to their dress orclothing, and how seldom have they, when cleaning them. given it a thought that Burdock Root ix the most valuable blood ! and purifier known, and is sold 1 druggist under the name of Burdock Blood Bitters. Price §1.00, trial size 10 cents. nted Me. Christian Ady & A workingman says: “Debt, pov- erty and sutferring haunted me for e, causéd by o sick family and arge bills for doctoring which did no good. T was cowpletely discouraged, until-one year ago, by tho advice of my pastox, I procurred Hop Bitters, and commenced their use, and in one month we weré all well; and none of us haye heen sick a day. since; and T want to say to all poor men, yon 'can kecp your families ‘well a year with Hop Bitters for less than one doctor's visit will cost.” eod-jyl Worthy ot Praise. ~As a rule we do not recommend pa- tent medicines, but when we know of one that really is a public benefactor, and does positively cure, than we con- sider it our duty to impart that infor- mation to all. Electric bitters are truly a most valuable medicine, and will surely cure Biliousness, Fever and Ague, Stomach, Liver and Lidney complaints, even where all other rem- edies fail. We know whereof we n}wuk, aud can_freely recommend to all.—[Ex. Sold at b0 cents a bottle Tsh & McMahon. ) TRADE MARK, RHEUMATISM, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lum Baokache, Soreness of the Chest, Gowt, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swall- inges and Sprains, Burns and % 8calds, General Bodily Pains, Yooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feot and Ears, and all othor Pains and Aches. e Preparation on warth equals B1. Jacoms O11 » and eheap Exterual B o o e i e B ':":-ul-y of 80 Cents, and every oce suffer. pain Lave chosp aad positive wroct oL e ey Directions in Kleven Languages. ’ QOLDBY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS N MEDIQINE. J.H FLIEGEL Buoccessor to J. I, Thicle, MERGHANT TAILOR No. 230 Douglas Stroet Omaha, Neb, Business College. THE GREAT WESTERN GEO. R. RATHBUN, Principal Creightan: Block, OMAHA, PR NEERASKA - W XA a tod altcuwnr X A WA gy dt d and current, which had not, ap- |} parontly, lost a [rnunduf carth or a | W.J. CONNELL, BOARD OF EQUALIZATION. scordance it Inture of the | nact & provide & sved March 1, 1979, the ounty commissioniers of Dougias cotnty, Ne braska, will at the office of the county eclerk at Omahe, in n successive days, somimencin pose of oqt rolls of the the y ear 1851 anything contai rpply at the time id county for ling aggrieved by | nssessmient rolls must ) stated a8 provided by law Jons. R, MASGRsTRT, Omaha, 18th, 1861 County Clerk Act-wit PROPOSALS FOR SPRINKLING received by the under Seated proposals & the under, od until the 25th day of Jue o'clock n10on for the sprinkiing of Farnham strect from 9th to 16th street, and north, and_south of each eross to alleys bet cen Bth and 16th streets, and Douglas street bets een 12th and | 16th street, The contract to cuase when the waterworks company «apply water in wich dis trict. Said bids pened at the rey ing of the et 1851, The ‘o ny and all hid the nain: al conditi maha,” and dellvered | than the time ab o0 L O dvwrrr jeos-at City Clerk NOTICE J. M, Stanton (full name unknown) Har- | riet Henn and Mary Shillock, non-resident defendants will take notice that Milton | Hendrix, of as, in the State th day of May, 1881, file his petit the District Court of the State of Nel ko’ within id county of I 1ad, st the said M, Stanton. Ha riet Honn and \lm\‘T) lock, impl with Ceorge Miils, Maggie Mo Josia flw .'LQA\lbl?;'(l\v wT I and John N k defendants, set forth that by virtue of a deed issuéd by treasurer of «aid county, he has an abso- Inte title to the outheast quarter of the northwest quarter of the southeast quarter of section nine, (9) u.“mhill- fifteen (13), range thirteen (13) e, ir ty; that you and each of said d claim to have some interest in aid land, and praying that he may be adjudged to have an indefeasible title to said premi: but that if his title should be h--h‘ invalic he may be decrecd to have a lien on & land, that it may be sold to satisfy same, and that you and each of you bo fo everledebarred from setting up or asserting any right or claim thereto.© And the_ said 7. M. Stanton, Harriet | and Mary s hereby notified that they are Teq pear and answer said peti- 1o on o belors the Arst. day, of Aupust, 1881, MILTON HENDRIX, By Crarksos & HONT, his attorneys, Dated Ouaba, dune 23, 1881, witul NOTICE. To Builders and Conteac Notice is by i will be re ¥ Kive sealed proposal ved by the Board of Trustecs of School District No. T, of Cumning county, Nebrus- ka,until £ o'clo of the 25th of June, A D. 1881, for ion of a school house in the town of West Poins in said School District, durings the present year, the same to be built and the ma. terial usod in the construction thereof, to be in accordance with the plans and specifications thereof, on file with the E‘flr«‘ufl of the Board of Trustoes of said School District, and which and specifications ma plans seen at the furnithe store of Louis Bley, in said town of West _Point, and a duplicate copy thercof at the office of Charles Drlscoll arctitect, in the city of Omaha, oh. The said Board of Trustees heroby reserve the right to reject any and wll bids reccived. Address, J. W. Poutock, Dire West Point Nebraska. may31-dtevt NebraskaLand Agency DAVIS & SNYDER, 1606 Farnham 8t., . . . Omaha. Nebraska. 0,000 ACKRES Carofully selected land in Eastern Nobraska for sale. Great Bargalny in improved farms, and Owmaha city property 0. F. DAVIS, WEBSTER SNYDER. Late Land Com'r U, P. R. R p-tebtt MRS. LOUISE MOHR, Graduate of the St. Leuls School of Midwives, at 508 California Street, Between Fifteenth and Bixteenth, north side, where call will be promptly cospond- cdto st aniy hour during tho day or night. w17d J. @ RUSSELL. M. D, HOMMPATHIC PHYSICIAN. Discases of Children and Charonic Diseases a Specialty. OMice at Residence, 2000 Causs strect. Hours—5 10 10a, m., 1to 2 p. m., and ufter ¢ p. m avl6d1m ATTORNEY - AT - LAW. | Orricn—Front Rooms (up stairs) in Hanscom's | new brick building, N. W. corner Fiteenth ad | Farnliam Streets. | GEO. H. PARSELL, M. D.| Rooms In Jacobs' Block, up stalrs, corner Cap | ftal avenue and Fifteenth strect. Residence, 4 Sherinan avenue. May be consulted a¢ residen 1roin 7t 9 p. m., excopt Wednesdays. PRCLALTY—Obitetrics and Discascs of Wome | S Oftice hours, 0 40 11 &, m. and 2 to 4 p. m.; Sun | 1!1\__\1 6to T D, m. mI'I-lIm_ A. G. TROUP, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW. Ovvicw inHanscomb's Block, with George E. Prichett, 1508 Farnhaw St., Omaha, Neb. éoggs & Hill, REAL ESTATE BROKERS. No. 1508 Farnham Street, OMAEIA, -~ -~ NEE. Ovvicw-North side, opp. Grand Contral Hotel, J.P.ENGLISH, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW, 810 South Thirteenth Btreet, with J. M.Woolworth. 408, B, CLARKSON, 0. 3, noar, Clarkson & Hunt, Buccossors to Richards & Hunt, ATTORNEYS-AT- LAW, 5. 14th Street, Omeh Neb, Geo. P. Bemis Rear ESTATE Acency, 16th and Dodge Sts, Omaha, Neb This ageuey docs s¥RIOTLY & brokerage businoss. Dot ot sariiste, and themeturs: ahy Dargains on its Sodks are insured 0 its patrons, instead of being yobbled up by the ent. DexterL. Thomas&Bro. WILL BUY AND SELL REAX. BST.ATE AND ALL TRANSACTION CONNMOTAD THERBWITY, Pay Taxes, Rent Houses, Ete, ¥ YOU WANY 7O BUY OR S8LL Call ut Offico, Room 8, Crelghtoh Block, Omaa, THE AOMAIVIAflDAILY BEE' SATURDAY JUNE 25 1881. AND STILL THE LION CONTINUES TO Roar for Moore(s) Harness Saddlery. ol g n as & Trade Ma allmy goods will ho STAMPED with the and my NAME on the sme. NO GOODS ARE ENUINE WIT ABOVE SFAMPS, ! T 1 and the most ekilled and at the lowest cush | list of good will ing for one, DAVID SMITH MOORE. D. 8. BENTON, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW. ARBACH BLOCK, Cor. Douglas and 15th Sts. Umaba Neb, D. F. Manderson, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW. %42 Farnham St., Omaha ‘Edward W. Simeral,! ATTORNEY - AT - LAW. Room 6 Creighton 1 5th and Douglas streets, three cent stamp for Catalogue and price list co information. N. 1. D. SOLOMON, 0 Paints,Oils and Glass OMAHA, NEB, WISE'S Axle Grease NEVER GUMS! Usod on Wagons, Buggles, Reapdrs, Threshors and Mill Machinery, It 18 INVALUABLE 0 PARN- W AND TRAMNTERA. 1t cure ches and ail Kinds of soreo on Horses and Stock, as well s on ™" GLABK & WISE, Hanuf’s. 385 Illinois Street, Chicago. 347 SEND FOR PRICES, Jo 24-0m-be taining full John G. Jacobs, (Formerly of Glsh & Jacolw,) UNDERTAKER. No, 1417 Farnham St., Old Stand of Jacob Gis, 4 Orders by Telegraph Solicited. ap27-1y J. R. Mackey, DENTIST, Corner 15th and Douglas Sts, Omaha, Neb. Prices Roarcrable. ap23-Sw BYRON REED & CO. OLDBST BATABLISIED Real Estate Agency IN NEBRASKA Keep a complete abstract of title to all Real Fatate in Omaha and Douglas county. maytt A W. NASON, Dentist, Orrick—Jacobs’ Tlock, cor and Fifteouth streot, On: DR. C. B, RICHMOND (Formerly Assistant Physician in Chicago Ob- stetric Hospital, for Treatment of Discase of Women under Dr. Byford.) r Capitol avenue b, Will devote my entirgattention to Obstetrics, Medical and Surgical Diseases of Women. Office, 1408 Farnham 8%, Hours, 9a. m. to whp m, m19-t AGENTS WANTED vok 0uk NEW BOOK BIBLE FOR THE YOUNG,” being the Story of the Scriptures, by Rev, George Alexander Crook, D. D., in simple and_attractive anguage for oid ani y asely illustra- ted, making a most impreasive youth s instructor. Every parent will secure this wWork. ~ Preachers, you should circulate it. Price & nd for ciroulars with extra terms, J H. CHAMBERS & CO. St. Louis Mo, A man of noted health was asked how it was he seemed to be always well. *“I am not partic cular in my meals: 1 eat what T like; and when evor I foel under the weather, 1 resort to my TARRANT'S BELTZER APERIENT, which | keep always in the house.” Wise man, and economicnl a8 well, Ile does not resort to violent means for relief. He uses Nature's rem. edy, in the shape of this apericut. £2'Sold by all’ Drogyists, HOTELS. UNION PACIFIC HOTEL, LEWIS HOUSE, HARTNEY HOUSE, HEAD HOUSE, MERCHANTS' HOTEL, CHENEY'S UNION HOTEL, CITY RESTAURANT, CHAPMAN'S SESTAURANT, LAUGHMAN'S RESTAURANT, NEOLA HOTEL, WOODWORTH HOUSE, CENTRAL HOUSE, EMERSON HOUSE, CROMWELL HOUSE, WALTON HOUSE, CITY HOTEL, MARSH HOUSE, QRAND CENTRAL HOTEL, CENTRAL BLOCK HOTEL | DIRECTORY OF LEADING PROPRIETORS. MARKEL & 8WOBE, JOHN 8. LEWIS, W. P. HUNTER, JOS. SHAW & €O, CHENEY & CO., CHENEY BROS. J. J TUOK, T.G. CHAPMAN, W. LAUGHMAN, F.SIEVERTZ, J. R. CALKINS 8. P. ANDERSON. A, L. SHELDON, MRS. R. COCHRAN T.C. WALTON, OHENEY & CLARK, W. W. BROWNING, E|D. COTTRELL, FRED, STADELMANN, WESTERN - HOTELS. TOWNS. U, P. Transfer, Council Bluffs Dow Oity, lowa. West Side, lowa. McHENRY HOUSE, T. W. BUTLER, vail, lowa. SUMMIT HOUSE, 8BWAN & BECKER, Creston, Ia JUDKINS HOUSE, JUDKINS & BRO, " Red Oak, 1a MENDIN MOTEL, ADOLPH WUNDER, Mendin, la THE OENTRAL HOUBE, JOBEPH BANKEY, Walnut, 1a IVES HOUSE, O. T. IVES, Hastings, la COMMERCIAL HOTEL, WM. LUTTON, Villisca, la. PARK HOTEL, W. J. GARVIN, Oorning, la BELDEN HOTEL, A.W. BELDEN, Woodbine, la LUSK HOUSE, JAS. A, LUSK, Logan, la GOMMERCIAL HOTEL, ©. F. CABSADY, Denison, la. BURKE'S HOTEL, E. R. BURKE, Carroll, la GLIDDEN HOUSE, 8 M. LEWIS, Glidden, la, SCRANTON HOUSE, JOS. LUCRAFT, Scranton, la ABHLEY HOUSE, DAN EMBREE, Qrand Junction, la Jefferson, fa Sioux City, la. Mo. Valley June., Dunlap, la Stanton, la Shelby, la. Neola, la Atlantic, la. Malvern, la Emmerson, la Cromwell, la. Onawa, la. Blair, Neb, Brownvile, Neb. Nebraska City, Neb. Plattsmouth, Neb' Max Meyer & Co. ONMAEILA. g . Guns, Ammunition,Sporting Goods f FISHING TACKLE, BASE BALLS, and a FULL LINE OF NOTIONS AND FANCY COODS. SEND FOR FRICE-LIST. MAX MEYER & CO. Omaha, Ne MAX MEYER & CO, TWHOLES A LE . TOBAGCGONISTS. Tobacco from 25¢c. per pound upwards. Pipes from 25c. per dozen upwards. Cigars from $15.00 per 1,000 upwards. DOUEBLE AND SINGLE ACTING POWER AND HAND B ONE P S Y Steam Pumps, Engine Trimmings, MINING MACHINERY, BELTING, HOSE, BRASS PACKING, AT WIIOL HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHURCH AND SCHOOL BELLS. % A. L. STRANG, 205 Farnam St., QTaha. AND IRON FITTINGS, PIPE, STEAM ALE AND RETAIL, AlL, sold at about MANUFACTU ——OF—— $SIL1LOOCOO —WORTH OF— BOOTS & SHOES To Be Closed Out Immediately Regardless of Cost. ‘We respectfully call your attention to the large and varied assortment of Boots and 8hoes, grades in Ladies' and Gents' Hand an several of the leading manufacturers in the East, which will be RERS’ SALE including some of the very best Machine S8ewed, from HALF PRICE To Close Out. This is a rave chance for BARGAINS, Come One, Come All, and Shoe your- self at HALF PRICE. Remember the Place, 216 8o. 16th 8t., Union Block, Bet. Farnham & Douglas. MAX MEYER & BRO,, LOVELY COMPLEXIONS POSSIBLE TO ALL. ‘What Nature denies to man Art secures to all. Hagan' Magnolia Balm dispels every blemish, overcomes 088, les, Sallowness, Rough- ness, Tan, Eruptions and Blotches, and removes all evi- dences of heat and excitement. he ia Balm_ imparts the most delicate and na complexional tints—no detec- tion le to the elos- est observation, Under these circnmstances a hnl't,;’:omphxlouhlmlonlmrt [ R everywhel 75 conts, with full pod the Oldest Wholesaleand Retail Jewelry House in Omaha. Visitors can here find allnovelties in 8ilver Ware, Clocks, Rich and | Stylish Jewelry, the La- test, Most Artistic, and Choicest Selections in Precious Stones, and all descriptions of Fine Watches, at as Low Pri- ces as is compatible with honorable dealers, Call and see our Elegant New Store, Tower Building, corner 11th . and Farn- ham Streets : MAX MEYER & BRO. | |for cash or ins MAX MEYER & BRO., ODM A E A . THE LEADING MUSIC HOUSE IN THE WEST! General Agents for the Finest and Best Pianos and Orgfil;‘s manufactured. prices are as Low as any Eastern Manufacturer and Dealer. Pianos and Organs sold ents at Bottom Prices. A SPLENDID stock of Steinway Pianos, Knabe Pianos, Vose & Son’s Pi- anos, and other makes. Algo Clough & Warreu, Sterling, Im; l'll!-li Smith Alnu'lmg' Ol'gamipe Do not fail to see ns before pur- P