Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 30, 1881, Page 2

Page views left: 0

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

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

Text content (automatically generated)

| - each other 9 " MANHATTAN ISLAND. Tho-Battle of the Bulls and | e oo e an Bears With Millions at Stake! Sprays from the Seaside—~Day- light Fireworks, Hlectric Illuminations, and Comet Solos. Grant in His Poverty at the Cot- tago by the Sea Prom an Occasional Correspon dent New York, July 27, Now that Roscoe Conkling has lost the senatorial battle, and the field subscription has taken to going up only in trivial sums daily, Gotham is obliged to rely upon internal and 1881. dome-made sensations, These have Jeen rather plentiful and tolerably citing. We have had one_ murder, a temporary collapse in the) market, a singer arrested for begging in the streets, an imported scandal from St. Louis, and seyeral other attractive lit- tle episodes with which to beguile the time. Added to this, it has bec - most hot enough to melt the rivets out of & steam boiler; whereat Coney 1sland has rejoiced, yea unto the point of exceeding gladness. But there has been nothing at our seaside resort this year to compare with the most ordinary traflic of the past two seasons. Last night, for instance, anyone who happened to drop in at DBrighton Beach must have thought that old times had come again. The place was jammed. Causo, fireworks and Levy, But the other hotels all along the beach were utterly deserted. At the Manhattan I don't believe thore were were a hundred people in all, and when there is desertion and dreariness at this place the others are likely to know what the same terms mean in their fullest sense, The fireworks dis- played at Coney Tsland are probably the most elaborate ever een in this coun- try. They are to those who have been surfeited with the other tawdry attractions of the place about all there is left to be interested in. At Man- hattan Beach they have a new kind of Japanese article of this description which is full of novelty. The day- time displays are simply marvelous. But at night Brighton is the most re- markable in this respect. The sight is beautiful viewed from a distance. 1 witnessed it last evening from the new iron pier, half a mile away. There were colored lights that shot up two or three hundred fect into the airand floated about at that height for four or five minutes before going out aud dropping into the sea; huge bombs which sprang upward and burst with loud reports, shooting in all directions over spaces of fifty or seventy-five feet; rockets that curved outward over the waves and made showers of sparks, which blazed into fresh flames when they touched the water; fiery serpents which chased imodically through the air thirty or forty feet over the heads of the crowd, and great heaps of red - and green firo, which lighted up the rolling surf and the beach for a quar- ter of a milo in everydirection. Under the brilliant illumination thus pro- duced, the huge breakers sweepin; shoreward had a curiously weird an spectral appearance, and the throng which lined the beach looked like strange, fantastic beings intently watching some mystic ceremony of the Orient. Added to all this, the meas- ured dash of the waves upon the sands, the dull whistle of the steamers plying up and down before the Island, and the faint strains of the music borne upon a gentle land breeze, which scracely stirred the banners on the pier, com- bined to render the hour and the situ- ation pleasanter and more picturesque than any T had ever known at Coney Island. But presentlythe fireworks ceased, the melody died away, and in ten minutes the place was in a scram- ble. People do not go to Coney Is- land or leave it deliberately. So far a8 have been able to observe, they all try to travel on 'the same boat. When you see 256,000, men and wo- men, with no apparent end of chil- dren, all trying to board a vessel that can possibly accommodate ten per cont of the number, the spectacle {woumou exciting but not. pleasant, particularly if you are in the middle of the orush, I was somewhat surprised when I finally succeeded in getting two or three feot of to mysuFi at the Battery to-night, to find that I had not been squeezed into the shape of a pressed cigar. Such pushing and hauling and jamming as there is between New York and Coney |1sland I don't believe is to be found anywhere in the world, There are boats enough and trains enough to carry all the people who want to go and come—or there would be if the people didn't all move at the same time. The Iron Steamboat Company has the “call.” Tt gets the highest prices, transports its passengers the most speedily, and gives its patrons the Iimm' number of luxuries of all the lines. But, take it all in all, Coney Island is bound to dissappoint anybody who wants or expects real rt. When there is a crowd the unpleasantly small, and when n't it absolutely dreary. Last t was pleasant so long as one could hang around the odges, but when he became surrounded it was f'u-z s troublesome as though there had been cne hundred thousand peo- ple on hand, LONG BRANCH, Long Branch has very many new features, especially in cotfages. Four or five years ago the most expensive house at Long Branch probably cost no more than 815,00& to $20,000, The house of Comwodore Garrison, which he is new occupymg for the first month, is lmliavm.ll to have cost $70,000 without the ground, which 15 held in that quarter at from $5,000 to $10,000 an acre, I don’t admire the house. 1t has some twenty gables ex- sed to view from the land side, and El’uy are piled one upon another as if a sucession of triangles constituted | zlfiu line of .be‘n:a’:y. ‘dOul; Juoln;muu- g huu:{?guu @ side of the house, made rick, runs up one huudru& or more feet, as if it was a buttress, and it nearly o'ertops the cupola tower at that end. In this great house the commodore, who is about nty years old, lives with his young wife, formerly Miss Randall. Her junior in of 8t. Louis, who boards at the West End Hotel with his wife. Although | the Commodore was a pretty sick man | when he married, many think he will | yet survive his wife, She has not been in the best health since that [event. They are very fond of each other, and go out riding every day. He still goes to the city to loox after business, though it is generally b lieved that he is worth not less than | £10,000,000, Indeed, theonly persons I see who are not slaves to something | are those who have small accumula | tions. There is not a single man here | of large wealth who does not have to run up town every morning by the early train and come down late. Here | | is Russell Sage, whose capital started | Jay Gould on his_second great eer | of ‘investment and speculation. | The most interestine of the new | cottages built here is that of Moses | Taylor, the celebrated shipping mer chant and coal deliverer, of whom it i3 said that for thirty or forty years he never went further than Sandy Hook away from business, He h built one of the low flat-roofed hou with open sides and of a blush cc which gives a pleasing impression. His son-in-law has built next to him, Taylor's eattage probably cost 835,000 Last Saturday I took o drive with Thomas Murphy and the Young brothers, to Murphy's farm of seven hundred acres, which is but a_little more than a mile back from the beach, and which he has just put into a cor- poration land in conjunction with some between him and the ch. They let the six hun- dred or seven hundred acres at $1,000 an acre, and expect to sell it for 2,000,000 in building lots, They may do it, but not in my time. As we were driving along, General Gar- field's case came up, and Mr. Young said, what struck me as rather strong for such a thorough Grant man as he 1s: “Garfield’s popularity is almost phenomenal. 1t looks as if he were going to bo the chief favor- n the country for the next ten years,” 1 asked Mr. Young if Grant was well situated *“Yes,” said he. “I think Grant's income can not be far from 850,000 ayear. He has an active intercst in a New York business house, which has been very successful. He gets, porhaps, 25,000 a year from the rail- road company, Jand the two funds raised by Jones and the Drexels for him amount to $330,000. 1t is not true that he has sold his St. Louis farm.” Mr Young said: “I have never taken much stock in that Grant phalanx, except Grant himself. 1 think he is a broad-minded, liberal man —~sometimes going pretty far for his friends. He may Ymvu indulged that good quality too far towards Conkling,” A gentleman who knows General Grant's daughter, Mrs. Sartoris, in England, says that her marriage, though criticised in this country, has turned out a first-rate match.” Her husband has a_respectable income ot Im;lnhly £2,000 a year, and with a home many years in his family he ives upon his income easily and has plenty of time for pleasure, for hunt- ing, fishing and boating. Nellie Sar- toris has three living children, and likes England and her mode of life. The redeeming thing in all these mar- rrages, even where money was the basis of the match, is the mutual outh of the contracting parties, hey can grow to fit each otfwr, 8- pecially if they are fruitful of chil- dren; but it is very hard for people mismatched in years to adapt them- selves to each other fully any more than a pair of shoes of two sizes can ever make agreeable locomotion on the wearer, CUTTING RAILROAD RATES, The railway war is still booming, and the voice of the rate-cutter heard in the land. There was an at- tempt the other day to patch up the difticulties between the (sitl'uront com- Imniun. but it failed through the neg- et of Mr. Vanderbilt's representa- tive to meet the agents of the other roads when they came together for the purpose of settling upon some de- finite course of operations. The re- maining representatives were extremo- ly indignant about it, and for a fow hours after the New York Central cor- poration’s man failed to put in an ap- pearaneo they cut things right and oft. He subsequently sent an apology, however, saying he “had not been ap- prised of the conference until too late to reach the pluce of meeting, In this connection it may be as well to state that it was not until Wednesday of this week that Lake Shore, which had sufiered keenly on the market through the war, reached a figure which induced Mr, Vanderbilt to bu heavily, just as I told you he would. The explanation of his passenger agent did not come until after this little oc- currence. At present the railway king is loaded down to the gunwales with stocks depressed by this precipi- tous flurry, Consequently his action, or rather the action of the passenger agent of his road, is regarded by the snrewd operators as a bid for peace, contingent upon which is the rebound- ing of stocks to their former level, The Erie and Pennsylvania peoplo, however, have not yet made up t}mll‘ minds that they are through with the fun, Consequently the reduction .in western fares remaing where it was al- most a week ago. It should be re- membered that all the roads are mak- ing money on_their passenger traflic even now, Mr, Gould will clear two dollars for every one wmnde by Mr. Vanderbilt on this deal. If there is a solitary thing which Mr. Gould likes | to do better than another it is to take advantage of somebody elsc's caro- fully-matured plans, . He can calculate in a minute on the top and bottom prices to be brought about by & given movement, and ho knows | better than the schemer himself just when to buy and sell. If anybody thinks the Wall street king was **left” on this deal he is welcome to the de lusion. Mr. Gould will clear a vast amount on the return of these stocks to their normal place in_the quota- tions, Jawmes R. ‘I\'ocll(‘, I learn upon good authority, is a big loser in the :‘poculllliun, They tell me Mr. Van- | erbilt bas been buying great blocks of Northwestern and Union Pacific | with a view to building a new road | |from Ogden to San Francisco and General |its origi THE OMAHA DAILY BET: SATURDAY JULY 30, 1881, This is untrue, however, 8o far as the purpose is_concerned. Mr. Vander | bilt is rapidly becoming a speculator, |and that is what he is fingering the | market for at present. From a posi- | tion of the most pronounced conser | vatism, Vanderbilt is rapidly shifting to that of a rather reckless stock op erator, He is feeling the pulse of his fortune, 8o to speak, and I shouldn’t be surprised if he found it feverish | before long. THE PROPOSED BROADWAY TUNNEL, | of Baltimore, has undertaken to pay | all damage and to restore the street to al condition whenever the service is broken. He contends that the sidewalks, curbstones, pavement and foundations of buildings will not be disturbed by the ring of the tunnel, and that buildings will not be jarred near so much by underground 08 by surface trains. The gas-pipes and water-pipes would be slung upon the roof of the tunnel as the work progressed, and the sewers would be torn up and rebuilt on one side. The obstructions to Broadway would be for one-half of its width in sections of one hundred feet at a time. There are five stations in the plans, which also show that on the western side of the City Hall park the roadway would run under the sidewalk and under the edge of the park, partly to avoid the Beach Pnen ic Transit tunnel, From the park it would swing under the middle of Broadway. The excava- tions would be worked from shafts sunk in the side streets. The tunnel would be twenty-five feet high, and while it was constructing a wooden trestle-work would hold up the Bel- gian pavement aboye. The tunnel would be enclosed in brick walls, and divided between the two tracks by a brick wall. Tt wouldadvance ten feet a day, and reach Fourteenth street in twenty month J. 0. B, SALT LAKE CITY. A Sad ‘' Pioneer Day " in the Mormon Mecca. Rapid Railroading in the Valley of Desert. In Which Check and Check- mate are Called by Rival Corporations. Bluford’s Budget of News and Notes. Special correspondence of The Bec. Savr Lake Crry, July 206, 1881.— Yesterday was a sorry attempt at a holiday. It has been customary in Utah to celebrate July 24th as Pioneer Day, it being the date that Brigham Young and the first company of Mor- mons arrived in Salt Lake Valley, in 1847. This year the twenty-fourth falling on Sunday, Monday was chosen instead. But owing to the news of President Garfield’s relapse and other causes, no general effort was made to celebrate the day. The leading banks, offices and firms closed, and the people straggled off to the Lake, or to the adjacent pleas- ure gardens, whilst the streets were duller and more deserted than on an ordinary Sabbath, which, as a rule, is very quiet in this city. Perhaps the present high rate of mortality had also something to do with the unusual quietness. The agony of suspence to those interested in Utah railroad matters is measurably over, as the mystery as to what company was doing ‘much of the grading within the borders of the territory, is solved. The Denver & Rio Grande Western railroad com- pany has lately been incorporated un- dor our Jocal statutes. Its programme is to build 2,370 miles of road, main line and branches, with- in the territorial limits, at an estimated cost of $16,000 per mile, or 857,727,000 for the whole. This will carry the branches of this road into almost every corner of the Great Basin, south of Ogden, and to the city of St. George in the south, But in their system is not included the trunk lines under the control of Jay Gould, nor the branch Tines built or in process of building, known as the Utah & Nevada, the UtahjSouthern, the Wasalch & Jordan Valley, the Bingham Canon & Camp Floyd, the Salt Lake & Western, the Pleasant Valley, the Saupete C., &e. Should the present craze for railroad building continue much longer, Utah will be covered with as thick a network of roads as is to be found in the neighborhood of our largest metropolitan centers. But there is a great fear that the thing is being overdone and a crash must fol- low Our biannual election takes place on the first Monday in August. Contra- Ty to the usual custom the non-Mox- mom citizens have nomnated, in very many parts of the territory gentlemen to be voted for as members of the legislature, assembly, ete. The dele- gate to e 8 is not elocted thus year, The Mormon conventions have renominated the same parties, us a son ast assembl, I note, however, two prominent exceptions. Messrs. Orson Pratt and Albert Carrington, of this county, who are members of the que rum of the twelve apostles, have not been renominated. The two tickets for this district ure as follows: Lhe non-Mormon ticket (the liberal party) — Councelors: B. Rosbor- ough, H. W. Larence, G. A. Lowe, H. Auerbach. Representatives: J. G. Sutherland, J. Cunnington, J. M. Williamson, J. Brunton, Heetor Haight, L. P. Edholm, The Mormon ticket. (The People's party) - For legislative councillors — Joseph F. Swith, Daniel H. Wells, John T, Cdine, Peter Barton, For representatives—John Henry Smith, Hasen Stout, James Sharp, Chas. W, Penrose, Samuel Francis, Of course, nobody expects but that the Mormon ticket will get the wmost | thus securing a new line to the Pacific, votes, BLurorn, eral thing, that were members of the | ¢ PEPPERMINT DROPS. Oayenne peoper will drive awav ants and mi pretty well this eum ling the only There s death in the cup—of iced. tea, when the thermometer is at 110 degress in ning roorn w Orleans Picayunhe ags patent | venting consu! tation: ace to Fourteenth street | pistol fully 1aid aside for the next, ! ded. A com- | American horses will never make as | mission is now hearing ouments for [ much money abroad as Ame vs [ and against the project. The ground [have spent there t ial sencath Broadway is clay and ~sand, | Bulletin and the contractor, Joseph Patterson, | b \E;;:r.’. inty ‘I\\.‘{.‘r_;ut\ please {Brooklyn he only O} | last week was | vccupy two se 1 in the cell with Guiteau? erprise n who died suddenly who was trying to passenger” conch while four women were standing up. | It ismo use giscovering any more liver. | pad comets, The conntry is tired of them Now let some rock-and-rye man_ adyertise for eyclones and it will make things lively. | Professional rat catchers | make more money than its professors, but have to back into sewers o kitchens, Rhode Tsland hins 210 miles of railroad, but when a deaf man is hoisted off the track by the cow-catcher, he always finds crawl under atoga it is a Wonderful indeed are the workings of the cooling apparatus now employed at the White House in Washington. Tt is stated on good authority that a cow, which pas- tures under the president's window, now gives ice cream, A Detroit doctor says people with light eyes and hair are those who have warf Now if some savant will tell us wh of eyes and hair denotes snoring m happy marriages will be prevented adelphia Chronicle-Herald This notice is found posted up in a Vir- ginia blacksmitn shop: “Notis—De c partnership her resisting Detwixt e and Mose Ski v resolved. Dem what oOe de firm will settle wid me, 1y un- [Phil- and dem what de firm owe will settle wid Mose,” da locomotive rushing at you,” nia philosopher, “'spring in the down_on the cowcatcher,” This plan is an excellent one, on Virvinia railroads. But if theman on the track is in a hurry, he will not waste time riding on a coweatcher. - [ Philadelphia News. Dr. Weisee has been shooting at dead bodies to find out where the ball lodged in the president’s case, but Dr. Bliss says that shooting at dead hodies to find the effect it would have on live ones is absurd. An opinion is that neither of them know much about it. It's the old story. “Where ignorance is Bliss, 'tis folly to be Weisse,” Albuquerque, N. M., hasa_greatly re- spected just ce of the peace. An_illustra- tion of his method of dealing justice is commended te justices in other far west idton Mexican, ‘‘Ye are ng canned goods; what hav ye to say? ‘lhe Mexican replied, ‘“‘Ruien sabe?’ “Well,” said the judge. “‘T'll thrust the harpoon of justice into yez and send you up Ku‘ ninety days, till yezmaybe can ‘sabe.’ Nixt!"” ixt! EDUCATIONAL NOTES. Moscow Lias six gymnasiums for 60,000 people. An endeavor to_abolish the teaching of Spanish in_th ncisco evening schools has just Tailed. The lunguage is found to be too useful to business in that region to be given up, The famous old English_schools, Eton and Harrow, Pugby and_Winchester, are constantly full to overflowing, although their_cost constantly increases. Oxford and Cambridge were never so crowded with students as now, Encouraging reports as to the ]prngrnmn( Jublic_education are constantly coming Foni Gacryia, . Tutereat 1n adnoation’ 45 rapidly increasing from year to year and the subject is coming to” the front as the first social interest of the state. The Earl of Carnarvon says that edu- cation in all its branches is now thrown open to English women, The archbishop of Canterbury says that the attempt made somé time ago to throw ridicule on what is called the higher education of women, has failed, The German newspapers state that the project of establishing » German Universi- ty in America is actually approaching realization. A buresu for advancing the matter is to be opened at Frankfort, and many of the most distingnished professors of the German universi.ies are on the com- mittee. Women teachers in Germany are far from well paid. Salaries begin at $200 and never exceed £450, When they retire, however, they e pensions, ~ Retire- ment at the end of ten years' service secures one-fourth of the annual salary given; and for every year of service added to the ten of the pay is given, ) subject i taught in the French prim- ary schools that is not deemed absolutely necessury for all citizens, and all the sub- jeets which are to be studied by a boy at school are given to him in his first year therein. These are only six: Reading, writing, arithmetie, French grammar, French history and general geography. The differe) tween the first and the third year is simply between an elementary and & ‘complete way of treating the same subject. The French way of rewarding a successful teacher is to promote him from a provincial school to a Parisan one, or to make him an inspector. Bradford, Pa., writes: I enclose money for SPRING BLOSSOM, as 1 said I would if it cured me. My dyspep- sin has vanished, with all its symptoms, Many thanks; I shall never be without it in the house, "rice 50 cents, trial bottles 10 cents, 241w —_— DYING BY INCHES, Very otten we see a person sufler- ing from some form of kidney com- plaint and is gradually dying by wnches. This no longer need to be so, for Electric Bitters will positively cure Bright's discase, or any disease of the kidneys oruriniary organs. They are especially adapted to this class of | diseases, acting Stomach and Liver at the same time, and will speedily curo where every other remedy has failed. Sold at fifty cents a bottle, by Ish & Me- Mahon, ( . WISES Axle Grease NEVER GUMS! Used on'Wagons, Buggies, Reapers, Threshem and Mill Machinery. It g INVALUABLE ¥O FARX: #i8 AND TEANATRRS. it curcs Scratches and all Muds of soreo on Horses and Stock, as well as ou ™" GLARK & WISE, Manuf's. 386 lllinols Street, Chicago. END FOR PRICES. J¢ 24-0wm-be The pepper must be thrown in | directly on the [ TRADE 9 GIALIBS | | | o S 1 g '(i %b ‘.:“‘ }?E THEGREAT i 1 WiRREEDY FOR RHEUMATISH, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Soreness of tho Chast, Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swell- ings and Sprains, Burns and # Sealds, General Bodily Pains, Yooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feet and Ears, and all other Pains and Aches. W Preparation on earth 2quals &r. Jacoms Ory 8 & safe, sivre, simple and cheap External Wemedy. A trial entails but the comparatively outlay of 50 Centa, and every ois sufler. {2g with pain can bave chieap and positive erool f its claima, e Pirections in Eleven Tangnagea s S0OLDBY ALL DRUGGISTS ANDDEALERS IN MEDICINE. A.VOGELER & €O, Baltimo™ ! Burdock WSS .00 D e BITTERS 1t you suffer from Dyspepsia, use BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS, 1t you are afflicted with Biliousness, use BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS; 1t youare prostrated with sick Headache, take BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS 1f your Bowels are disordered, regulate them with BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS, 1t your Blood is impure, purify it with BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS. 1f yeuhave Indigestion, you will find an antidote in BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS, 1f you are troubled with Spring Complaints, er- adicate them with BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS, 1t your Liveris torpid, restore it to healthy action with BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS, 1t your Liver is affected, you will find a sure re- storative in BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS, 1t you have any speci not to take B ot jiumor or Pimple, fail RDOCK BLOOD BITTERS, 1f you have any symptoms of Ulcers or Scrofulous Sores, a curative remedy will be found in BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS. For imparting strength and vitality to the sys- tem, nothing can equal BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS, For Nervous and General Debility, tone up the system with BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS. Price, $1.00 per Bottle; Trial Bottles 10 Cts. FOSTER, MILBURN, & Co., Props. BUFFALO, N. Y. Sold at wholesale by Ish & McMahon and C. F. Goodman, "~ je 27 eod-m IVIL, MECHANICAL AND MINING EN- GINEERING at the Rensselear Polytech- nic Institute, Troy, N. Y. The oldest engineer- ing school in America. ~ Next term beging Scp- tember 16th. The Register for 1850-81 contains a. list of the graduates for the past 54 years, with their positions; also, course of study, require- ments, expenses, ste. Address DAVID M. GREENE, §i 14-deodaug14 Director. SEALED PROPOSALS. D proposals will bo received by the un® igned until August Lst, at 12 o'clock noon, for the construction of sidéwalks in front of and adjoining the following described premises to- wit: Lots 20, 17th street. Lots 1, 4,6,20 and 21 in block 8, west sideof 17th street. Lot 1 {n block 8, Sweezoy's addition. Lot 1in block &, Reed's 1st addition Lots 1 and 16 in block 7, Reed's 1st addition, Lot 16 and seuth } of 1ot 1, block 0, Reed's 1st additiou. Lots on the south side of Cass in block 363, 3 and 4 on south side of Cass in block v addition, and 80in block 64 on west side of J. J. L. C. JEWETT, EXCURSION TICKETS omxdheo BLO. OO ROUND TRIP, $19.00 ViatheC.B.&0. B B, First-class and good through the year. Also New York, Bostox and all Exstern points, at pro- portionately low rates. On sale ONLY at HOBBIE BROTHERS Kailroad Ticket Off 50 Tenth dt., O M. R. RISDON, General Insurance Agent. REPRESENTS: SSURA! 0., of Lon- v .. 85,107,127 dme-&wlm A RAL Southeast Cor. of Fifteeuth and —QMA "BROWNELL HALL. YOUNC LADIES’ SEMINARY OMAHA, NEB. Rev. R. DOHERTY, M. A, Rector, Assisted by an’able corps of teachers in English Latikuges, Scionces and Fine Arte THE NINETEENTH YEAR suer. 7, 1881, Fur particulars. apply to sguiet o 21-cod-tm THE RECTOR ) L HEMAT T nr= hhj--hfi .WiNnflW SHADES. Lt (e “HEoND b ORCHARD & BEAN, | J. B. FRENCH & CO, CARPETSIGROCERSI THE GREAT WESTERN CLOTHING HOUSE. M. HELLMAN & CO,} Spring Suits ! All Styles ! IMMENSE STOCK AT WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. The Largest Clothing House West of Chicago A Department for Children’s Clothing. ‘We have now anlassortment of Clothing of all kinds, Gent’s Furnishing Goods in great variety,and a heavy stock of Trunks, Valises, Hats, Caps, &c. These goods are fresh, purchased from the manufacturers, and will be sold at prices lower than ever before made. We Sell for Cash and Have but One Price. A large TAILORING FORCE is employed by us, and wem SUITE TO ORDER on very short notice. ©ALY. AT sEmmE O 130l and 1803 Farnham St., cor. I3th J. B. Detwiler’s CARPET STORE. The | argest Stock and Most Com- plete Assortment in The West. We Keep Everything in the Line of Carpets, Oil- cioths, Matting, Window-shades, Fixtures and Lace Curtains. WE HAVE GOODS TO PLEASE EVERYBODY. REMEMEBER TEE PLA X 1313 Farnham §St., Omaiha.. DOUBLE AND SINGLE ACTING POWER AND HAND U N IE S | Steam Pumps, Engine Trimmings, MINING MACHINERY, BELTING, HOSE, BRASS AND IRON WITTINGS, PIPE, STEAM PACKING, AT WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. HALLADAY WIND-MILLS, CHURCH AND SCHOOL BELLS, A. L. STRANG, 206 Farnam 8t., Omaha,

Other pages from this issue: