Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 14, 1881, Page 8

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§ } e - THE DAILY BEE Thursday Morning, July 14, LOCAL BREVITIES. ~Patterson sells coal. —Get your hats at Doane's, —Drink Saxe's Peruvian Deer, —Smoke Saxe's hand made 100 ~A. W, Nason, Dentist, Jacob’s block. ~REveryone drinks Saxe's Cream Soda. ~Natural Mineral Water on draught at Kuhn's drug store, ~For rixe Commercial Job Printing, all at Trr Bre Job rooms, ~Great rush for Dress Goods at At. Kinson's; low prices will tell. Jy12:4f ~The Lion continues to roar for Moore's Harness and Saddlery. ~Whipple, McMillan & Co., the jewel. ers, Creivhton Block. 026-4f —Prescriptions a specialty, Opera House Pharmacy, 211 8, 15th Street, —Safes, machinery, and all kinds of heavy hauling done by Brisco & Co., the safe men, wis-tf —TLook out for sneak thieves and pick- pockets during the circus parade to-day —Abont forty car loads of cattle passed through the city from the west Tuesday. This business is just now very brisk. —At 2 o'clock yesterday the ther. mometer indicated about %0 degrees in the shade on Farnham street, ~Albert Thomas residing at 1421 How- ard street was overcome by the heat yes. terday and is compelled to keep to his bed for tha bresent, ~—Leslie Egan, who was so badly injured on the Fourth that it was thought he would lose his eyesight, is recovering, Hix «eye will not be permanently injured. ~The rules and regulations of the Water Works company have been printed and are now being distributed. Applications will mow be received from those desiring water in their houses. —A picnic will be given by the Bohemi- an gymnastic club at South Omaha- park next Sunday. It will be preceded by a street parade, participated in by the Turners and other societies and followed in the evening by a ball in Bohemian hall, —The express from the west over the T. P. yesterday was well loaded with pas- sengers. There were three sleeping conches ‘with every birth oceupied, thirty of them being taken at Denver. ~—There is a good deal of fault being found over the fact that an old frame building on Harney street and another one on Eleventh street are allowed to blockade these thoroughfares, ~—Officer Gorman found & man on the streets last night in a helpless condition who said he was following and betting on the Omaha racer “Wild Irishman.” He proved to be a drunken tramp and did not even know the name of the city. ~—The trial of ““Crankey Bill,”,the fellow ‘who shot at people on Douglas street night Defore last, was not held last evening as announced, but was postponed until Sat. urday next, when the district attorney will be at home. In the meantime “‘Crankey Bill” languishes in the county Jail for safe keeping. The officers say tho only insanity he was affected with was drink, H. A. Doud, of Nebraska city, arrived in town yesterday. Gen. Manderson has returned from lake Minnetonka, L. H. Stiles, of Sandwich Tlls, is at the Metropolitan, C. C. White, of Valparaiso, was‘among yesterday's arrivals in Omaha, Hon, C. T. Williams of Wahoo, is regis- tered at the Creighton house, Rev. Geo. L. Dorsey, of Parkinsburg, Towa, is staying at the Canfield house, Joseph Bell, ticket agent at the U, P., depot left -yesterday on a trip to Lead- ville. Prof, Samuel Aughey, of the State Uni- versity at Lincoln, is staying in the city for a few days, W. J. Johnson, arrived in the city to- day from Chicago and put up at the Creighton, Huntington Brown, of Mansfield, 0., arrived inthe city yesertday, and registered at the Creighton, W. W. W. Jones, of Lincoln, state superintendent of public schools, is among the guests at the Creighton. C. W, Wheeler, of Brownsville, affix- ed his signature to the Creighton house Tegister yesterday. 'W. C. Cqup the showman, accompanied by his wife and child, ave staying at the Metropolitan, Will R, Redick, left yesterday for lake Minnetonka, where he will spend his vacation, returning abont August 1st, Frank Geise, a well known lawyer of York, Pa,, has been in the city for several days & guest of Coroner Jacobs, He left yesterday for Denver, Chas, 8, Pleiffer, of 8t. Joe, who has @ contract for furnishing such stone as is necessary in the construction of Boyd's opera house, is stopping at the Creigh. ton, Mrs, Jameson, wife of Dr. Jameson of this city, accompanied by her son left the city to day for a visit swmong her friends at Decatur, Tlls, Dr. Jameson joins his family the first of August, and enters into his new field of labor, at Saginaw city, Frank Parks, the present ity editor of the Lincoln Globe, and Will Pickett, fore- man of the Globe newsroom, are in the the city, visiting Eugene Montgomery. They are on their way to lake Minnetonka, Minn. Harry Hall, transportation agent of the Vandalia, goes south this morning, 7. P. Lindsay, of Indianola, Iows, is in the city. He is staying at the Withnell, Nath, Brown, of 8t. Louis, western pas- senger agent of the O, B, & Q., is at pres- et in the city, Geo. N. Clayton, of Kausas City, gen. eral western passenger agent of the Wa- bash, is in the city. John High, general passenger agent of the Great Western and Canada Southern, v arrived in the city: Mus. Smith, a relative of the late Mrs, Morrow, arrived yesterday afternoon from Carbon, Wyoming, for the purpose of ac- companying the remains back to Pennsyl. wania, THE BUSY BEE. How He Improves Each Shin- ing Hour, And Gathers Honey When the Woeather is Fine, A reporter visited Mr. Theodore L. Von Dorn's apiary the other day and in a conversation with him elicited some information which will no doubt prove of interest to the readers of Tue Bee, Mr. Von Dorn has given the sub- ject of bee culture considerable atten- tion, He considers that there is plenty of room for more aviaries in Omaha, and that there is a fine opening for a profitable business to be done in sup- plying honey. As things are,he says, the demand is far greater than the supply. At the present time Mr. Von Dorn has thirty-five colonies but he fully expects to have forty-five before the end of the season. Each colony con- tains an average population of thirty thousand so that at present Mr. Von Dorn is the guardian of no less a number than one million and fifty thousand little bees. Proba- bly he has more as he says some colo- nies will average forty thousand or even fifty thousand bees. A bee has not come to maturity until it has reached its twenty-first day. The bee shows a good deal of tactindealing with foreign intruders. If they come load- ed they are welcomed into the hive, but unhappy is the invader who comes empty-handed, all he will get is stings. The bee will let any honey making material enter the hive but nothing can be taken out. Great deference is shown to the queen bee. The other bees will watch over her and feed her continually, Occasionally the queen will take a short vacation but will always return to her hive unless she happens to meet with a fatal mis- adventure. A geod quesn will lay no less than twenty-five hundred eggs a day. Some queens have been known to lay as many as four thousand eggs per day and that continuously tor a month. The average price of a good queen is three dcllars. The bees rarely extract from flowers close to their hives, They prefer to go some distance, and fre- quently they will go miles to get what they require. Bees are sold by weight early in the seagon they fetch $2.560 per pound. The price now is one dollar per pound. The weather has a great influence on the bees; if it is wet or damp, but lit- tlehoney may be expected. In the winter too, they don’t do any work, From the first of May till the end of Juneis the time they produce the bees and during June to the first of July the most honey. From October till April, if warm weather, they will fly occasionally. They never lay any eoggs in frosty weather. During the winter months they lie in a dormant state and con- sume the honey they have stored in the summer. The bee has two stomachs. In the first they carry the honey to the hive, and the second stowmach is used for digesting their food. When a bee has any honey to deposit in a cell he contracts the mus- cles of lus first stomach and forces the honey out. It would pay farmers generally to keep bees. Darwin says: ““No bees, no seed; no seed, no in- crease of the flower.” He says that twenty heads of white clover’ visited by bees produced 2090 sceds, while twenty heads so protected that bees could not visit them produced not one seed, The Italian bee is considered the best. Mr. Von Dorn has some which wero brought straight from sunny Italy. A very uoufi price is often ven for a good queen. The bee, ike everything that is mundane, has his enemies, It suffers more or less annoyance from the bee hawk, the gge louse, lachina, mice, sprders and ies, Mr. Von Dorn’s opinion was that there is quite a field here about for profitable bee culture, e Delinguents Pay Up. County Treasurer Heins yes- several jaws tightly together and sealed his mouth with my hand, but to my hor- ror and amazement he struck a higher key and continued his blood-curdling When T cried out in agony, “Will you let up on that snore?” the answer came to me in echoes, ‘‘Never- snore. more, nevermore,” 1 despair of relief now, unless I shut off his wind entire- ly, in which event not only myself, but the neighbors, would be greatly benefitted. Cass STREET SUFFERER. s Look Out for Them. The advance guard of sneaks and petty thieves that usually follow in the wake and with a circus company has arrived in Omaha in anticipation of Coup’s display to-morrow. Tie Bk would suggest that silver ware and trinkets be not left around too loosely for the next few days. - LAND LEAGUERS. They Held an Important Ses- sion Last Hvening. A meeting of the land league was held last evening in Clark’s hall. Mr. Gray, the president, was in the chair. Mr. Donovan informed the meeting that he had forwarded to the Irish World 8300. The president an- nounced that at a meeting held at the Creighton House last Monday the ex- ecutive committee decided thai a meeting will be held on Sunday after- noon next at the Catholic union li- brary at 3 o’clock. Mr. John Rush said that last week he was presented with a card of membership in the Red Oak, Iowa, land league. This card was a masterpiece in design, and had some very suggestive inscriptions upon it. He thought it would bea good thing if the Omaha land league had similar cards. On paying the initiation fee (26 cents) a member should be presented with a card. He called the attention of the meet- ing to the important fact announced in The Irish World, that many of the Irish constabulary were resigning. A resolution was then proposed and carried that the executive committee be instructed to order 300 cards from The Irish World. Mr. Rush then read the following resolution, which was carried unanimously: “Wnereas, The Evening Telegram of the Oth instant published a com- munication over the nom de plume ‘Napper Tandy,’ criticising Tur Omana Bee and its editor, Mr. E. Rosewater, for an alleged insult to the Irish American leaguers of this city, and thatsaid correspondent wrote agif he expressed the sentiments of the Irish people; therefore ResoLvep, That the Omaha TIrish Land League hereby deny any con- nection whatever with said communi- cation and that as far as we know it has not been written or caused to be written by any member of this organ- ization. A lively discussion then took place on the subject of the arrangement of the forthcoming picnic. It was re- solved that the picnic be held in Rogers’ park and to be held on a Sat- urday. The meeting adjourned till next Wednesday. A CROOKED CUSTOMER. His Little Game is Discovered and He is Locked up. Ofticer Vanouse late last night ar- rested # man named Walker who has been playing a crooked game for some time. He just got out of jail a few days ago and at once started in. His game is to go into a store and mane a small purchase, say amounting to a a nickel's worih. In payment heten- ders @ ten dollar bill. When he receives the change he gener- ally discovers that he has a nickel about him, and so informs the shop- terday began to ‘‘whoop ‘em up” for the delinquent tax-payers of the present and former years. The sub- ject of back taxes has become quite a serious problem, Under the law the amount or delinquent taxes comes out of the treasurer's salary unless he make affidavit that he tried to levy on the goods of persons not paying up and was unable to raise the money. AL S 3 No Cure for Snoring. o the Editor of The Bee. A recent number of Tur Beg con- tained an article copied from The New York Sun, in which a prominent physician gave it as his opinion that snoring was caused by breathing through the nostrils and mouth at the same time during sleep, and that if the mouth waskept resolutely shut that horrifying, sleep destroying seund would be vanished, Now, I can aflirm to my grief, after an experience which has cost me many hours of sleep, that the reverse is equally true, My room-mate possesses olfactories of ' 40-horse wind power, with an equal capacity for producing a continuous gurgling sound not unlike thedistant rumbling of thunder. Thave argued and persuaded even to exas- peration, but it only increased his duleet treble more and more. When 1 read the above wmentioned artiole I thought relief was near, and laid my plans to plug his nose or mouth and thus obtain hours of unbroken re- pose. They failed to bring me the much-needed relief. 1 have held his man returning a five dollar bill and the nickel, and asking for his ten dol- lar bill in exchange. His endeavor is to confuse the dealer and in this way cheat him out of $4.95, He has got his game down to a scientific basis and it requires a steady head to circum- vent him, He attempted to play his game in several places and was suc- cessful in two or three instances. The police were at once notified of the business and were on the lookout for him when Officer Vanouse made the arrest. ————————— Real Estate Trausfers, The following transfers were re- corded at the county eclerk’s office yesterday, as reported for this paper by John L. McCague, real estate agent and conveyancer: Byron and Louis Reed to Marie E. Burmestor, parcel of Market street, and lots 8, 9, 10, in block 249, Omaha. W. D —§2,000. Ida P. Drake, et al., to Wm. Hudson, lot 4, block 11, Reed'’s first addition, W, D.— . Peter Johnson and wife to Hans Rohwer, sw } section 19, Tp, 16, R. 12 east. W. D.—§3,000. Poter Faust to Joha A. Harbach, lots 14 and 12 in block 6, Horbach's second addition. Q. 0. D.—$49.00, John I Redick and wife Mary J. Rose, parcel in lot 9, Capital add. W. D.—$600. 0. P, Harford et al., to Redick & Connell, w §, lot 3, block 147, Omaha Q. €. D.—§1,000, Isaac 8. Hascall to Henry Fingals, parcel in sec. 84, tp. 156, range 13, cast. W, D,—§100, T'HE OMAHA DATLY BEE: BLUFFS MATTERS. What ie Transpiring Over the Way. Paragraphe of Personal and General Interest. BLUFFS BREVITIES, The mercury staid up in the attic all night on Tuesday, much to the an- noyance of would-be sleepers Yesterday's Bee announced the ar- rival of twenty-one car loads of Mor- mons at Council Bluffs, en route for Utah, Seven hundred and seventy- five more have recently arrived at New York and are now on their way westward, bound also for Utah. They Welsh More are expected. are Scandanavians, and Scotch. The gas company are putting down English, new pipes on First street. A force of men are at work on lower Washington avenue, putting every- thing in good shape. There is no doubt that a manufac- turing boom has been begun in Coun- cli Bluffs in earnest. Every new en- terprise of this kind carries the city forward in the right direction. But there is no enterprise so important to Council Bluffs as waterworks, Even the certain assurance that waterworks would be built within a specified time would greatly stimulate all branches of business. People of Council Bluffs in some respects are like the crew who were lost at the mouth of the Amazon and were out of water. They did not know they were sailing in fresh water, and some of them died before they discovered the important fact. There is with a mile and a quarter of Coun- cil Bluffs a spring equal if not superior to Colfax water. This spring is lo- cated near the residence of Maria Mynster. W. A. Mynster went over to Omaha yesterday on business connected with his law firm, Three drunks and two pickpockets pooled their issues in Judge Burke's court yesterday. Council Bluffs has a broom manu- factory, and it is in a prosperous con- dition under the effective management of P. T. Mayne. A man of business has arrived in town, and says he thinks a store on the north side of the creek near the flour mill would pay. There are sev- en thousand people there. It is understood that parties are ne- gotiating for the Mynster lot, next to the Second ward school building, and contemplate the erection of a fine brick residence very soon. Dr. Hart is placing a new brick sidewalk in front of his office on North Main street. One thousand teams were counted moving on Broadway and Main streets yesterday and there was no tourna- ment or circus either. A little boy fell into the deep cut made by the recent heavy rains on Oakland avenue. He was rescued by some other boys, A gentleman at the U. P. Transfer depot was heard to remark: “What a pity these people put their graveyard there! Tt spoils the looks of the city and certainly must be unhealthy.” The man’s name was not C. R. Scott. A horse got loose on Pearl street yesterday forenoon and walked down to the hydrant, and finding the water all out he began to eat the ice. A sack of flour is produced every minute in Council Bluffs, J. B. Corbaley, llving near Crescent City, thinks crops will fall a little short in Pottawattaimie county this fall. Mrs, Ira Platner will not build the wall in front of her city residence as high as the old one and will cap it with stone, which will give the water a chance to run over and prevent 1t tumbling down in case of another heavy rain. There is an old stump left by the men who commenced to grade Cap- tain Henry's lot, on Oakland avenue, standing in the centre of the avenue, that measures eight feet in height and five feet in width, It has re- mained there since last fall and thus far no citizen has been injured. This column is for the purpose of building up Council Bluffs, and if you know anything that will have that tendency let it be known and it shall go in - where it will be read from Maine to Oregon. Mrs. Dr. Osborn is having a very fine American granite monument placed over her late husband’s grave. It is rumored that the street rail- road company are to tear up their old track nnl} replace the same with flat iron; a much needed improvement, as the present raised track impedes car- riage travel very much, A number of the leading citizens are becoming interested In the matter of a tunnel under the Big Muddy, mentioned in this coiumn the other morning. The more it is thought of and talked about the more feasible it appears, Omaha and Council Bluffs ought to shake hands across the Big Muddy and pull Logether, An electric light thrown from a tower fifty feet high on the top of Mount Lincoln would make the city as light as day the year round. Mayor Vaughan has just received over the Wabash railroad three car loads of extra oak lumber, to be used in the construction of sidewalks. It is understood that to Mayor Vaughan is due the credit of -wpl:gfi the emigrant train which was supj to have on board the seeds of that fatal scourge smallpox at Pacific THURSDAY, JULY 14, 138L Junction, and he remained out nearly all night to sccomplish it. Some citizens are taking steps to procure estimates of the probable cost of the suggested tunnel under the Missouri river, concerning which Tnr Bee hopes to be able to publish some interesting facts in the near future. P. C. DeVol is receiving and selling large quantities of barbed wire every day. Clay Platner, salesman for Grone- weg & Schoentgen, came home last Saturday from a prosperous business trip. L. A. Casper shipped a very large quantity of vegetables on the various railroads yesterday. Anything a man may go into in Council Blufls pays. Stewart Bros., wholesale grocers on Main street, report a very large in- crease thus far this year over last in their business, M. D. Fezler, traveling agent for Stowart Bros., has recently returned from a twenty-four days trip in Ne- braska, He speaks well of the coun- try. Evidences of enterprise and thrift appear on every hand. He re- }mrtu also that Stewart Bros. have a arge and increasing business in Ne- braska, their sales having doubled within a few months on his route, Mr. Fezler is a wide-awake salesman, Ben Rogers, proprietor of the Ele- phant Livery stable, on Main street, n”\nsitu the post office. is one of the oldest livery men in Council Bluffs, Heo has been in the livery business continuously for twenty-seven years. W. G. Morris’ carriage manufactory on Broadway reports a fine run of business, which is constantly increas- ing. He commands a large share of home patronage. Mr. Morris makes a specialty of light buggies. Thesuc- cess of these home manufactories shows what can be done here. d Mgt DOUBLE ACCIDENT. Two Boys Hurt, One Perhaps Fatally. Two little boys named Charley Barry and Joe O'Hearn were standing on Eleventh and Cass streets watch- ing a train of cars being shoved about, when one of Metz's beer wagons hap- pened to come along. The boys were 80 intent upon watching the engine that they never noticed the vehicle until 1t was upon them, and the driver did not discover the peril they were in until it was too late. Both boys were knocked down by the wagon. Young O'Hearn was merely struck upon the cheek and slightly bruised, but otherwise escaped uninjured. The other boy, however, was less fortunate. One of the fore wheels of the wagon passed vertically along his stomach to near the breast bone. The wagon was heavily loaded with beer barrels, and the only wonder is that the boy was not killed outright. The wagon was stopped as soon as the accident was discovered, and the body lifted from under the wheel. He was carried to the residence of his parents, at 1112, Chicago street, and Dr. Coffman summoned. The little fellow was found to be very badly bruised and he is probably internally injured. His recovery is doubtful. B THE PUBLIC NOSE. It Strenuously Objects to Odorous Garbage Carts. A nuisance which requires immedi- ate abatementisthat of anopenslopand refuse wagon which freauently wends its way through South Omaha to the city himits. The route along which it passes is thickly settled and the vehicle leaves in its wake a penetrating odor of the most able-bodied character. People living down that way would just as soon go through a little plague as to see that wagon lumbering along. The odor penetrates into all corners of the houses along the route which the wagon passes and it requires hours of labor to get rid of it. Following the wagon is an anny of scavenger flies, of aslimy green variety, which dis- tribute themselves along the route and make life a burden to the inhabitants, Attention will proba- bly be called to the matterat the next meeting of the council when an effort will be made to either have the gar- bage removed before it is thoroughly decomposed, or, if it is absolutely necessary to wait until it is in that SPRINKJLII‘IG STREETS. Why it may Probably not e Done After all. The dust will soon become a prob- lem again, and there is no means at hands of laying it. The misunder- standing between Thomas Swift and the council committee on streets and grades is still unsettled and there seems to be no immediate prospect of settlement, Mr. Swift says ho is per- fectly willing to carry out thecontract as signed by him, but if it is desired that additional sprinkling be done on the alleys to either side of Douglas street, a proportionately larger sum must be paid. The com- mittee does not seem disposed to do this, and Mr. Swift, for his part, says he will not knuckle under. The pros- pect of having the streets generally sprinkled is growing beautifully in- definite. Should Mr. Swift's contract be cancelled it will probably be neces- sary to go through the same routine in council and being advertised by the clerk,. Meanwhile it smd that two sprinkling carts have been hired, one by Max Meyer to sprinkle Farnham street between Tenth and Eleventh and the other by Dewey & Stone to sprinkle the next square west. It is to be hoped that the matter of generally sprinkling the streets will not be al- lowed to fall through. BUSINESS NOTICES. Watch repairing a specialty, at Whipple, McMiilen & Co. jy13-4t. . “WINE OF CARDUI” cures irregu- lar, painful, or diflicult menstruation, At C. F. Goodman's, Spectacles at EpHoLM & ERICKSON. Napoleon did not succeed in con- quering the world, but W. H. Rob- ertson, the blacksmith, did, not by war, but by natural genius. His Lit- tle World, the greatest mechanical wonder known, is on exhibition at 1219 Farnham street. Don't fail to see it. Ladies’ and Gents' Gold and Silver Watches in vreat variety, at Whipple, McMillen & Co’s. Jy 13-4t TIEMEI T e ey Parasols cheap at the Boston Store on 10th street. SPROIAL _ NOTICRS--ontinued, N7 ANTED—25 carpenters. WIll pay the high- St waveto Jood men, | Apply b 1015 Farnham st 2 T Tridge and s W AT, cinek, Bollev e, \ FANTED A partner or r. Inquire at Philadelphia Coffee House, 10th strect. 2%0. TANTED--A No. 1 Barber can find a steady \V sitition and good oy, by Inquiring st & (old nimber) 15th street, Omaha,Neb., of 207-t1 C. 1. FI 7 ANTED—Two boarders. Young men_pre- \ ferred, Addruss “A." Bee office, 140-t¢ ANTED—-BY ONE OF THE LARGEST Wholesale Clothing Houses in New York City, for the coming fall taade, experienced sales men. Those having experience and commanding agood trade will find thisa first clas oppottunl- ty. Apply at once, with references to A. B. C., Post office box 308, New Yerk Cit, ANTED—A girl to_do general housew 716" Farnham "stroet, ‘o feweddeat-6t TED~A good dining room girl immedi- v at the Occidental hotel. 220-t1 Appl cornor of 1 Wwa (ALL AT MRS. D House, cor. “To buy 8 good skiff. Ad , Beo off in the JOR it o frnished strect; botween 16th and 17th, from the northeast corner of 17th, YO LET—With board a large fu A fow day boarders wanted, 1508 street. JOR lifornia t Cheap, two stores each with four rooms at the southeast cornier 10th and Cape itol avenue, 860-14 [OR SALE—Four full-sizod lots in Isaacs & Selden's addition, for $400. 852-14 BOGGS & HILL. F(mlxlt:NT~‘rlnn-n- furnished rooms to { rent. inquire at Carpenter shop next the Bee office, 316-18 R RENT_-Niesly turnihed larye room and piano .8, W. comer 15th and Capital Ave. 083-t OR RENT—Furnished rooms. Inquire at 1818 Chicago street. 606-t1 Pon RENT—2 farnished rooms over Mei. chants’ Exchange, N. E. cor. 16th and Dodge streets. 250-4¢ __FOR BALE. _ Foll SALE—A good span of wmules. Inquire of 10th street Meat Market. 390-16. 3 v 7 or 8 squares from 8hops, Price 81,050~ John L, McCague, agent, opposite postoffice. 381t OR SALE CHEAP—The only hotel in North Loup, Valley County, Neb., 30 miles from St. Paul, 16 miles trom Ord, = Good location, good trade and improving. For particulars write A. J. C.. North Loup, box 9, 871-augll ALE—A good horse and bug; . F. B, care Bee office. 7 OR SALE—A good team of draft mulesa K [ 86014 HARRIS & FISHERSS. MBRELLAS—And Parasols repwred by M. U _SCHUTT 11th and Farnam sts. 780t JOR SALE-A large two story frame shingled " roof Hotel and one story Kitchen; also one story frame, shingled roof, hall room for ten scts to dance, and barn large enough to hold” twenty teams- Al situated on corner of Broad and 4th street, Fremont, Dodge Co., Neb. information apply to ~C. C. THOMPSON, 358-t0 88 Fremont, Dodge Co,, Neb Beauty, health, and happiness for ladies in 2 WINE OF CARDULY C. F. Goodman’s, l“'\\)K SALE.—A General Merchandise Store— rain House, and Soales. Will scll cither orboth. - Located in one of the best grain points on the B, & M. railroad. For further prrticuls call or address J, B. LENINGER, Waverly Sealed bids will be received at 1418 Howard street, Omaha, up to b o'cock p. m., July 18th, for the renting of the entire Booth privileges during the holding of the State Fair, commencing September 12th, to the 17th, inclusive, at Omaha, for the entire dining hall. 'Warm meals privilegs and also the entire Booth stand privileges. Parties bidding can bid on one or both, I reserveing the right to reject any or all bids. C. HARTMAN, Treasurer State Board of Agriculture. jy11-5t At C. F. Gooduian's, SPECIAL NOTIGES. NOTICE—Advertisement To Loan, For Sale, Lost, Found, Wants, Boarding, &., will be in- serted in these columns once for TEN CENTS per line; each subsequent insertion, FIVECENTS per line. The first insertion never loss than TWENTY-FIV] S A new house, built two years, full elland evetything complet between 20th and 27th, premis. Atreet, quire n JOR SA ! ton and a good second-hand phaeton. Also a new delivery wagon, GEO. H, FITCHETT. Shop on 15th street, opposite Withnell House. 250,44 FOREALE “Gont house With Tour ragu and half lot, No. 2613 Dodge between 20th and 27th street.” Good well and shade trees; good condition. Inquire on premises. BILIUK FOR SALE. 203t ESTABROOK & COE. TOREALE=S50 caah wIIT buy fixtures of the cleanest little bus city. Address “‘Businoss,” care Carri postoflice. stock and IOR SALE—A small cngine, B. W. Payne & Son's make. In perfect osder. Inquire of H, G. Clark 30-tt QOR SALE-Leaso and furmiture of a first-class ! hotel in a town of 1800 inhabitants, in stato of Nebraska; has 24 beds; the traveling men’s re- Inquire at BEE office. 2 sort. Fun SALE—Two-story house and part Iot, near depot. ~Location good. John L. McCogue, Opp Post Offi 958-1 Ful: ALE—House and lot wuitable for warchouse, - Inquire of Peterson, 10th St, 901-t7 JOR SALE—2 acres ground in West Omaha. Inquire of J, Henry, No, 116 16th, 873-tf OR SALE—Maps of Douglan ad Barpy coun- ties. A, ROSEWATER, 1620 Faruham street 320-t1 TO LOAN—MONEY. =0 (V()(\1O LOAN—. : B250.000" Cerest i sinms of 85,60 an upwards, for § to 5 yoars, on_first-class city and farm property. BEMIS RXAL ESTATH and LOAN Aorxcy, 15th ‘and Douglas Sts. ONEY TO LOAN—Cali at Law Oftice of D, L. Thomas Room 8, Crelchton Block, HELP WANTED. ANTED—A good reliable man to work by the month. Must understand the care of horses, cows andgarden. W. J. CONNELL, 892-15 1504 Farnham Street, VWV A%TED—A good girl a4 1612 Davenport st. Good wgée pald, 89915 ANTED—A steady girl as dishwasher, Reineke's restaurant, 13th and Jackson street, 40015 MISCELLANEOUS. OST—Black silver mounted cane bearin the name of D. J. Selden, Finder will Pplease return to this office, 711 OST—Bunch_of 4 or 6 keys, near postofhico, Leave same’and receive reward at Bee office. 88018 watch, gold rope chain and nugget at- The above reward will be pai turn of the watch to B84tt REWARD—Lost, gold hunting case stop $50 tached. on re- HUGH McCAFFRE 16th and Douglas stree Tmum or four young men can be accommodas ted with b Keferences exchanged. Ap- ply 2011 Cass street, 4th door west of 20th St., oraddress Box 337, postoffice. 34301 ONEY TO LOARN on real estate, at 206-c0d-10 DEXTER L. THOMAS & BRO. M. BROWN-—Corner 12th and Cmmfi: streets, is ready to bore or deepen wells. Satisfaction guaranteed. 5031 ANTED—A competent girl for general housework, to whom ood wages will be paid; northwest corner of 23rd aud Burt St. ANTED—A i $20 per month. thorou, competent cook, Wages, MRS, G. W. AMBROSE, Farnhau St. 0541 condition, then to have it carted ANTED—Te buy u well located and estab- A A A T Ao lished ice to its destination in an air-tight | ylsines. Partics having such for sale ch vehicle wmay address balance of this week, E. M. A., Oc- g cidental hotel, Omaha, Neb. 0716 AL G S b - Lus o ANTED—Fur Scwers, at Richter's, oppo- Arxrested for Theft. W site postoffice, 889-14 Officer O'Donoghue yesterday arrested Hugh Richmond on charge cf stealing a fifty dollars set of harness from Thos. Murray. The alleged theft was committed in October, but Richmond has been out of town since, The harness was made for Murray by Richardson and only used a few times. Richardson is now locked up, A AF.&AM There will be a special communica- tion of St. John's Lodge, No. 25, this (Thursday) evening, for work in the F. O, degree. Visiting breth- ren are cordially invited. James B, Bruner, Master, Marriage Ceremony: Cards have been iuuecl' for the marriage of Mr. Ashbel Patterson and Miss Annie C, Hayden, both of whom are well known in social circles of this city. The ceremony will be per- formed on next Tuesday at 12 o'clock in Trinity cathedral. ANTED—A good girl. Wages liberal. 2115 W Callfornia street, bet. 218t and 220 strets. 303-14 ANTED—By o _respectable girl, a place to 80w by the week as ascamstress, Address M. D, 216 18th street. 38814 ANTED Dy hoarders, southwest comer w 15th and Nicholas streets, $3.60 per week, 39114 ANTED—Competent cook, good _wages. WG e Bie s 886-13 first-class cook. Appl; pply at N, rner of 16th and Davenport. 88613 ANTED-—A first-class cook and stewart imediately, at the Oceldental lotel ANTED-Au experlenced flau{n :l? pe writer. R, G, DUN & CO. ANTED-—Good lathers. A’ly ply 8. W. W Cor. 18th and Izard, BA’ & WIL- LIAMS, a1e-14 ANTED —About 100 yards of dirt at south- \ cast corner 21st and Webster. 300-13 P. J. CREEDON. ANTED—A boy 15 or 16 yeaes old, at Oma- ha Shirt Factory and Latundry. 318 ANTED A Milker. Nonebut an_experi- euced dairy i need spply. Palace nar ket, 18 “Nx'rm» Good girl for housework, Inquire at 706 south 19th street, between St. Mary's avenue aud Leaveuworth, 97018 TJVEAMS—Gan b got at Jonn Barr s stable for all kinds of work at reasonable figures, near wor 15th and Leavenworth strects. 878 ON'T FORGET—Tho successors of the Amier- icau House, on Douglas street, between 9th and 10th, for board, lodging and transient cus tomers. " Kespecttuily 664-t1 ULIUS & LOUISE ROSS. POWDER Absolutely Pure. Made from Grape Oreamn Tartar. No other pre arpation makes such light, flaky hot breads2 usurlous pastry, Can b eaten by Dyspeptic without fear of theills resulting from heavy indi gestible food. Sold ouly In cans, by ail Grocers. ROYAL BAKING POWDER €O New York.

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