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1. 1 THE OMATIA DAILY BEE: W.\IOI\I)A\Y. SEPTEMBER 12, 18! DAILY Pawnbrokers, 8 10th St bet, Far. & Har. heds, as per other arrangoment ~ = T — ~ \ — — — e rement. | The ladies especially aro very desir - | ful and eflicient service, for a man tho | once. Thoy take a fist full of salt, | BEE. |, ROSENFELD, THE Florist. A o OPRIETORS | 4 e el = A Donashue, panta,ctt fowers, sesds, boqats | R S ; [ world over, by a perve or instinet [ and with many melodious eoos call | DURING THE - -+ 016 Farnham, bet, Oth and 10th Streets. | ote. N. W, cor. 16th an | Douvlas streets A Cineinnati Lgvfly S 0bgerva- | of mature; careth best for his own | the sheep. As soon as the perfumo | TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION e - et i lnmbs. The second year tho|of tho salt reaches them tho whole S' | '_A_' l 1 E: E' éé | B O dopg 14ar, 1t dvibos (poetie 00| epnien) voREWATER, teotemon: Bisek | 1008 00 & Neliraska herdor has his own flock, the |liord makes a ‘idend break” for it | B emonthis o W oo MOl tewn Sutveys, Grado and Scwerago Systerns & | increaso being fully 100 por[The author of the trouble stands it | 1 T i . AILWAY TIME TABLE. Cemmissien Merchants. | but the high road to_competenco lics | ing shio will herself be m | LN R - JOMIN G. WIL LIS,141 Dodge Street, - o him, One of the pots of | veritablo I 1 dovoured | [ TN ™ MR CAKD CIHICAGO, &1, FAUL, VISNEAVOLA AND For dotaily sce largo advertise: [ [y oovo Blook of Grazing | high-bred Scoteh sheep | bodily, thr s and ye # ) Sl o, ‘” “l- KT, A nd Weekly. e e, WY ¥ " T Sho takes out the man- | for a” r Thereafter whon she h ..l;ve'\u-\l";"“\.y 3 sl ; er, : RSN rovasce, Land ’.;'wm-(l by Mr. John (\(»;Ih(-‘.y\. flock ‘v.(l]u: grazin; round 'xf’h.q -)‘\.wl.; it is in llhu.ls:llup of - Artive Oinshi—No. 1, through ' passonyer ulactuirers 6F CAFAES, W. Bookwalter, in t u"Hlul‘mln n u-mu\(n: to tas | mutton .n[( the festive board of n‘»‘ s E ort bl bl accos, 1505 Douglas. | port its safety at noon, At 6 o'clock | mansion house. e ki { LEAVING OMAUA KAST OR SOCTH BoUND. | acturcr 514 1000 atroct. - she goes ont and “bunches” the sheep | No such moonlight shines the world | e C, 1. &Q. 00 m 3 ornice Warks. 5 . s the last one in tho corral, [ over, itis said, as floods theso west 2 Hox ling and tho Herders--Shenx= C'& N W, €. 1 &1 v . Arrive WEET OR SOUTHWESTS Neb., Through Express, £:35 o, m. o Freight.—i v W., St L& P, 10:5 a. m.—4:25 p. m. G FROM THE WEST AND BOUTHWEAT, n Lincoln—12:12 p. m. U. P. ¥ 1:40 p. 1, i reight . m wixed, ar. 4:5 p. m. Rori, Nebraska Division of tne St. Paul & Sioux City Koad, No. 2 leaves Omaha 4 leaves Omaha 1 1 arrives at Omaha No. 8 arrives at Omaha at 1 DUMMY TRAINS BA[WEKN OMAHA AND OOUKCAL BLUVES. Teavo Omaha at 8:00, 9:00 and 1:00 D, 00 00, ), 4t uncil Bl 8; Opening and Closing of Malls. ROUTE, s for State of Towa leave but once & 0 8, . Mail 14 also opened at 10:30 a. m. Office open Sundays from 12 m. to 1 p, THOS. FHALL | oO™vEAEEA Bugsiness Directory. Westorn Cornice Works, senice, Tin, Iron and &I ¥ locality promptly exc Manufacturers Tron it Orders ated in the best ing and Selting the Flocks, Ete, Galvanized Tron Cornices, Window Caps, ete., L Dy oy part oe®] Wo aro indebted to a known Cin- manufactu TOLD_ 416 Thirteonth st Crockery, 1800 Dougias stroe J. BONNE Good line. cinnati lady, who has spent a portion of the summer in Nebraska seeking health in the pure, elastic golden Clothing and Furnishing Goods. GEO. H. PETERSON. Shoes, Notions and Cutles Fence Works. OMAHA FENCE CO. 8 & C0,, 1218 Harney ai Tcd Boxes, Iron and Wood F Also Tlats, Caps, Boots, , S04 S, 10th street, , lmprove- s, Offico aromatic days and dewless nights of that favored region, for some dotails of ranches and ranch life that may not be uninteresting to the general reader. The general reader hasvery i at some time or other in his life, sighed for his own vine or fig tree, Raill Jounters of Pine and Walnut 's Patent. ‘Retrigerators, Canflel C. F. GOODMA; 11th St. bet. Farn, & Harney. and, thrilled with the importance of a landed propriotor, has marked on his Quckct map, us did the great Emperor Show Caso Manufactory, 0. J. WILDE, Manufacturer and Dealer 1n all kinds of Show Jases, @, 1317 Case St. RHARD, Cascs, Uprigh between Leavenworth and Marey, warranted first-class, proprietor Omaha 818 South 16th strect, All goods Nicholas, the lir.e of his famous rail- way, the limits of some possible hor stead in the boundless west, where he might live out his lifo a lord ot the s0il and number his cattle on a thou- sand hills - upon thousand hoofs would be more accurate statically, but less Scripturally, so let it stand. 8toves ana Tinware. A. BURMESTER, Dealer in Stoves and Tinware, and Manufacturer i and all kinds' ot Building Work, Block. 1809 Douglas 8t. Good and Cheap. Nebraska forms the lowest eastern grass-clothed slope of the Rockics,and the Arteketa Ranch lies in its extreme southenstern border—a glorious re- gion of Wllowy prairies, green seas Seeds. 00 J. EVANS, Wholesalo and Retail Seed Drills and Cultivators, 0dd Fellows' Hall. that stretch away in a boundless ox- panse of velvet turf, broken here and there by dotted clusters of the cotton- Physiclans an 1 urgeons. Block, 15th Stroct. . GIBBS, M. D, Ryom No 4, Creighton wood, the emerald turf flushing ame- ahyst, with the blooms of heartsease and milkweed, or a yellow mist of P. §. LEISENRING, M. D, Masonic Block. ye and Ear, opp. postoffice C. L. HART, ). D., DR, L. B. GRADDY, Ocnlist and Aurist, 8. W 16th and’ Farnham Sts sunflower and golden rod. On these flowers feed the wild bees and mako again the true honey of hybia, as aro- matic as the fabled product of the Meditteranean. Overall the clouds Photographers. GEO. I PROP, 1 G 3 212 Sixtee near Masonic Hall Firs Vi noss guaranteen h Street, and Prompt- make a play of shadows, and the Ar- teketa winds 1 and out of its its miles of shaded bank These velvet plains form one great cattle range that stretches away across the Platte and P. W. TARPY & CC.. 216 and Douglas. Work promp D. FITZPATRICK, 1409 Douglas Street. Plumbing, Gas and Steam Fitting. bet. Farnham the splendid valleys of ‘the Loup country to Montana and the great northwest. ting and Paper Hanging. A. KOSTE . 1412 Dodge street. The ranch—ranch, by the way, is a variation of the Spanish rancho, a farm—on which this lady was a_gucst Abstract and Real Estat JOIIN L. McCAGUE, opposite Post Office. W. B. BARTLET? 317 South 13th Street. Architects. A. T. LARGE Jr., Room 2, Creighton Block, Boots and Shoes. JAMES DEVINE & €O., Fine Boots and Shoes. A good assortment of home work on hand, corner 12th and Harfiey. THOS. ERICKSON, 8. E. cor. 16th and Douglas. JOHN FORTUNATUS, , 605 10th street, manufactures to order good work at fair pricos. Repairing done, Bed Springs. 3. F. LARRIMER Manufacturer. 1517 Dourlas st. Books, News and Stationery. J.X. FRUEHAUF 1015 Farnham Stroet. Butter and Eggs. MCSHANE & SCHROEDER, the oldest B. and E. house in Nebraska establishod 1876 Omaha, CENTRAL % KESTAURANT, MRS A, RYAN, southwest corner 16thand Dodge, Bost Board for the Monay. 7 Satisfaction Guaranteed. Meals at all Hours, Board by the Day, Week or Month. S " Good Torms foF Cash. Furnishe) Raoms Supplied, Carriages and Road Wagons. WM SNYDER, 14th and Harney Streets. vewellers. JOHN BAUMER 1814 Farnham Street. Junk. f H. BEPTHOLD, Rags and Metal, Lumbsr, Lime and Cement. FOSTER & GRAY corner 6th and Douglas Sts, Lamnps and Glassware. J. BONNER 1809 Louglas St. Good Varlety, Merchant Tailors, G. A. LINDQUEST, One of our most popular Merchant Tailors Is fe- | d ceiving the latest designs for Spring and Summe Goods for gentlemen's wear. = Stylish, dural and prices low as ever 215 13th bet. Doug.& Farn, Millinery. MRS. C. A, RINGER, Wholesalo and Retall, Fan- cy Goods in great variety, Zephyrs, Card Boards, Thosicey, Glo\ o, Corsets, c. . Gheapest House i the Wast. Order Purchasers eave 30 per cent. by Mail, 115 Fifteenth Street. Foundry, JOHN WEARNE & SONS, cor. 14th & Jackson sts Flour and Feed. OMAHA CITY MILLS, Bth and Farnham Ste., Welshans Bros., proprietors. Grocers. Z. STEVENS, 21st between Cuming and Izar T. A. MCSHANE, Com. 23d and Cuming streets. Hardwaie, Iron and Steel. DOLAN & LANGWORTHY, Wholesale, 110 and 112 16th street A_HOLMES corner 16th and California Harness, Baadles, &c. 8. WEIST 20 15th St bet 0 & Harney. Hotels, CANFIELD HOUSE, Goo. Canfleld, 9th & Farnhan DORAN HOUSE, SLAVEN' 1. Cary, 918 Farnham gt. 'S HOT) laven, 10th St. us. Hamel, 6th & Leayenworth Iron Fencing. The Western Cornice Works, Agents for the Champion Iron Fenc of Fancy Iron Fe ete. 1310 Dodge st Clothing Bought, © SHAW will pay highest Cash price for second haud clothing. ~ Corner 10th and Farnham, Dentls DR. PAUL, Williams' Plock, Cor, 16th & Dodge, Drugs, Paints ana Oils. KUEN & O, Pharmacists, Fino Fanc Goods, Cor. 15th and Dougls s utrects, W. J. WHITEHOU E, Wholcsale & Rotall, 16th st, C. C. FIELD, 2022 Norih Side Cuming Street. M. PARR, Druggist, 10th and Howard Strests, JOHN H. F. LE4MANN & CO,, New York Dry Goods S:ore, 1610 and 1812 Fam. bam street. L. C. Enewola_also boots and shoos 7th & Pacific. Furuiture. A F. GROSS, New and Second Hand Furniture and Btoves, 1114 Dougms. Highest cash price paid for second hana goons. J. BONNER 1809 Douais st. Fino goods, Shos Bcores. Phillip Lang, 1320 Farnbam et., bet. 18th & was the princely possesion of John 14th. | W, Bookwalter, the present candidate Second Hand Store. ERKINS & LEAR, 1416 Douglas § Second Hand Furniture, iiouse , bought and sold on narroy margins. ing Goods, for gubernatorinl honors in Ohio. 1t is located_in Mission creck, Pawnee county, Neb., fifteen miles from the Kansas border, and embraces 20,000 Just opencd wost clegant Beex Hot Lunch from 10 to 12 overy day. J FALCON] “ Caledoni . 679 16th Street. of the choicestacres of the best part of the great food belt of the continent, which lies between the 40th and 42d allels. Ten miles from its western boundary lies the Otoe reservation, where still lingers a handful of this Undertakers. CHAS. RIEWE, 101¥ Farnham bet. 10th & P. PEM) ham an 303} Tenth strect, betwoen F Does wood and’ cheap wor) old branch of the great Dakotas, and who will, in October next, tumble their topeos, and take the trail for the Indian Territory, A well wooded 1. 89 Cent Stores. 5 Farnham S P. C. BACK PROBATE NOTICE. State of Nebraska, Douglas County es: At a County Court, held at the County Room, in and for said County, August 20th, . SMITH, A. . 1881, Gounty Judge. Present, HOWARD In the niatter of the estate of James K. Ish, de- ceased:| On reading and fling the petition of Martha M. Ish, praying thatadminist-ation of said estate €1, at ned for hearing said peti- may be granted to her as administratix: Ordered, That September 15th, A, D. 10 o'cleck a, m., is a Faney Gonds ¢ Court stream called the Arteketa, after the heteditary chief of the Otoes, flows through the great ranch, which also preserves in its name that of this else forgotten chief. The mansion house of the ranch is one of those patent structures built in sections and transported all ready to be put up. It isan affair of eight not large, but comfortable, rooms, and which by no means limit the hospital- ity of the master of the house, which is something worthy and unpar- alleled, tion, when all persons interested in said matter may appear at a County Court to be held, in and for s1id County, and show cause why the prayer of petitioner should not be granted, and that no- | 1. tico of pendency of said petition and the hearing | thereof, be given toall persons interested in said matter, by publishing a copy of this orderin Tirk | o OMAHA WEEKLY BEE, a newspaper printed in said County, for three successive weeks, prior to said dsy of Rearing. HOWARD B, SMITH, i d au2dwst County Judge* herder. sheep ranchers have The Bookwalter ranch is devoted to stock-raising, the flocks numbering 3,000 sheep, cared for on seven min- r ranches, located in different parts f the estate, each mn charge of a Cattle and not sheep are in- igenous to the far West, and so the adopted the PROBATE NOTICE, phraseology of the cattle men, Their tlocks are herds, their shepherds are herders, and their sheep-folds are State of Nebraska, Daugrias County, s At n County Court, held at the County Court HKoom, in and for said County, August 16th, A. D 1861, Prosent, HOWARD' i SMITII, County udge. corrals. THE HERDERS, At each of the seven ranches which dot the Arteketa ranch is a flock of In l.l:::imnlur of the estate of Ferdinand Thum, cceased: fi i 3t On reading and flllnfi the petition of Emilic | 1,000 sheep in charge of a herder. Six Thum, praying that the instrument, this day | sheds, each 100 feet long, are erected filed and purporting to be the lost will and testa- | t, ghelter the flock from the winter ment of the kaid deceased, may he proved, ap- 3 et vided it proved, allowed, probated and recorded us the [ 8torms, and a corral is provided iu t will and ‘testament of said decease that administr: ed to said Emili hum, as excent rix: OrpERkD, That September 10th, A D, 1881, peti- tion, when all persons intercsted in said matter appear at a County Court to be held, in and cause why the prayer ted; and that 1 tice of pendency of said petition aud the heanng to all persons interested in raid publishing & copy of this order in Ta per printed in said 10 o'clock 8. m. is assigned for hearing eald may for said County, and she of petitioner should not b thereof, bo giv matter, | OMAIA'Y to HOWARD (A truc copy , and n of said estate may be grant- 8, prior B. SMITH, County Judge, auel7wit which to shelter the sheep at night. Yiose | The herder is given a pony and sad- ,at | dle and a sheep dog, and furnished a comfortable one-room house provided with the requisites for his simple housekeeping. Here he lives a quiet and pastoral life, which in the lan- guage of the ranch is called ‘‘back- ing.” Tnuthe morning, always mounted said | he takes his flocks afield to the graz. ing ground, laviats his sturdy little Indian pony, and then pipes his lute, PROBATE NOTICE, State of Nebraska, Douglas Count, Ata County Court, held at the County Court Room, in‘and for said County, August 1st, HOWARD B, 8M D. 1801 Present, Jounty Judge. matter of the estate of Joseph H. casod: cading ar 8. Nelson, orting o last will and testay the probate the Fountain C¢ ity, Sta! braska, Ordered, That August 27th, D, 1881 rested in said matter appear at a ( said County, an nershould how cause why the pra; ot be thereof, Le given to all persc matter, by publishing a cop; OMAIA' WEERLY BEE, & new day of he: [A true ¢ auglo-wit i, filing the petition of Martha ng that the instrument, pur- ho @ duly authenticated copy of the 1t of waid deceased, and of of, by the Circuit Court of of Indiana, and this day filed in this Court, may be allowed and recorded, lland testament of said Joseph H. cased, in and for the State of Ne- Ing said petitio wranied; and that notice ency of sald petition and the hearing { 8 interested in said of this order in Tux per printed in said County, for thiree successive weeks, prior to said ) HOWARD B, SMITH, County Jud and mvites his soul and loafs? Not 50, the herder is a man of affairs, alert and watchful for all that may peril his flock. He scents the wolf afar, singles out the ailing ewe, examines the hoofs of the lagging Jamb, is learned in snake bite cure, and can read you softly all the remedies for scab and kindred evils while the well trained collie keeps the flock from starving. At nightfall the peculiar cry of the berder and the sharp bark of the collie float over the praiie as they “‘bunch”— that is, gather together the flock for the corral, Here the sheep soon settle into a quiet, unbroken sloepuntil morning. Ocaasionally o wolf gets into the fold, The first intimation of trouble is the bleat of the stricken lanh and the quick trampling of 60,000 little hoofs a sound quito indoscribable, like the vushing of winds and the pattering of 1,000,000 falling leaves, but on heard nover to be fopegotten, The Nel- t 10 WISE'S Axle Grease NEVER GUMS! Used on Wagons, Bugiies, Reapers, Throshers 16 i INVALUABLE 70 PARM 1t cures Seratches and all kinds of soreo on Horsco aud Stock, as well as on ™" CLARK & WISE, Manuf's, 365 lllinols Btreet, Chicago. and Mill Machinery RIS AND THAMBTERA, £@rSEND FOR PRICES, Jo 24-6m. sheep-dog and herder, whose vigilance should have kept out the intruder, soon expel him, and the flock sink at onee into quiet. The herder is no little “boy blue,” buta veteran of the bushwhacking type, clad in a broad chiecked woolen shirt and trousers, high boots, and broad sombrero of light felt, occasion- ally. He is an eastern lad, *‘learning the ropes.” The herder is paid $28 per month, and.finds his own food- black coffee, bacon and dubious bread forming the staple articles of diet. At Arteketa, as the flocks increase, the herder has a flock intrusted to him on a different basis, He receives bs Planing Mill, A. MOYER, manufacturer of sash, doors, blinds, moldings, newels, balusters, hand rails, furnishing scroll sawing, &, cor, Dodie and 9th streets, A. G. TROUP, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW 10 wages, but half the increaso is his and half the clip of wool, and he is provided with a herse, dog, Youse and Then sho visits the family, demands | the approval of the household, and | out to play The steadicst of | matrons till her flock is folded, she then in a moment becomes one of the | most frisky and impudent of puppics, 0ddly enough, she was never trained to these duties, but is a born herder, inheriting from her mother, an im- portant Scotch collie, the accumulated knowledge of a famous race of sheep dogs. SUEAR is one of tho interesting sights of the early summer, Sheep shearing isnow a regular business in the southwest, and there are men who do little else for a living. They stroll in bands hunting sheep to shear; they zo from ranch to ranch, their freo nomadic life possessing a peculiar fascination, They cut a fleece with marvelous rapidity. The sheep is first washed in the pool, and before she has recov ered from her surgrise the shearer has her across his knee and her tumbled flecces lie in a woolly heap at his feet. The cost of shearing is from 3 to 8 conts a fleece. The wool is Dbaled much the same as cotton is picked, and is then stored in_the wool house, When the whole L‘ip is in it 1 then sent to the easfern market. The Arteketa wool, a fine grado of merino, all goes to the Boston houseof Denny, Rice &,Co. i Na HAYING, Haymaking upon the ranchis an- other of the midsummer sights. The wild grasses are deliciously fragrant, and leaand upland breathe incense for mules around. The entire harvest of the hay crop on the Bookwalter rance is in chargo of a city bred youny man, 23 years old, who, two years was a clerk in San Francisco, ty thousand tons of hay are cut and stored in the scason, being stack- ed in ricks of from twenty to thirty tons, All the work is done by the most approved machinery, and ‘even then a force of fifty men is required. To seo ten mowers follwing one after tho other over the velvet prairio is as fine a sight in its way asa review of the Fourin Hand Club. Even the stacking of the hay in ricks is done by To see the great sweeps, like some hungry monster, grasp a hundred pounds of bay in its teoth and then sweep through the air, pack it, and then return foranother mouth- ful of half o ton or so, is one of the most uncanny sights in ranch life, and fills the granger with delight. Haying and grain raising for the winter feed is also conducted on shaves, the same as the herding, o certain proportion coming to the ranch by right, and the ranch owner buying at market rates the farmer's share, so that he realizes a cash value for his labor. Several farms of fifty acres are already broken upon the ranch, and each year adds”to the number, These are some of the realities of ranching, though we have omitted to ne one of the pleasantest—the re- ward which sweetens labor—the prof- its. These are vaviously estimated, after deducting every expense, to be from 40 to 75 per cent per annum upon the amount invested. With §600 or 81,000 in hand a suitable herd can be | started and ranch provaded, The young sheep-grower would have to lay out of his money about eight months from the time of buying his herd; then the wool clip would provide him with sufficient funds for all his wants until another clip came in. Meanyhile his herd in- creased the natural increase being in the neighborhood of 80 per cent, and, barring accident, he has laid the foundation for a ‘‘sheep bonanza,” The delights and romance of ranch lifo are inexhaustible, Fancy the pleasure in making the circuit of forty miles, which form the boundary of Arteketa ranch,well mounted on a little Indian pony, whose unshod feet leave no mark upon the velve: turf, These little beasts shy at the least provoca- tion, and a rather neat seat in the saddle is desirable or the rider is like- ly to execute a semi-circular transit through the air, followed by a kind of riocheting movements along the sur- face of the ground, which is unques- tionably diverting to all but the per- former, The fire guards and swallows strike the stranger’s eyes especially, Each quarter section 18 divided from the other by a space of plowed ground twenty feet wide, which, under ordi- nary circumstances, stops the conrse of the frequent praivie fires. These guards in the Bookwalter ranch are cach six miles long, tho team that plowe them making but two furrows a day, one up and one down, These brown ribbons, laid in regular inter- vals across the green velvet carpet, are very striking, and their use is very strikingly illustrated when the flames sweep over the prairie, the snake-like tongues of firo darting across the mson heavens from horizon to zenith, but stopped short by these magic boundaries, Tho sloughs (*‘slews,” call them), the *“dips” between the rolling billows of the prairic are little ponds, some but a fow fect deep, and others thirty feet or moro. Many of these ponds scem {0 have grown out of “buffalo wallows,” a term used on the pr 8 to designate a sink madg by the buffaloes pawing the earth for tho purpose of obtaining & smooth, dusty surfage to roll upon. Those form channels for the desconding rain, and i yoars the channels are worn down until veins of lasting water are opened and constant flow- ing streams established, A chain of a dozen of the wallows full of figh, and fringed by rich grasses high as the pony’s back, are not uncommon, and are the watering places for the herds, To “aalt” the sheep and make the acquaintance of “Old Hurricane,” a nrlumlhl thorough bred Spanisk ram, the pride of the ranch, are two of the \first duties of the guest at Arteketa, the natives o praivies, and their sunsets, the | wholo western sky reflecting a glow- ing mirage in tho ea wvens, havo baftled the deseriptive phrases of the poets, Mr. Bookwalter, who has drawn a good many of the prizes of lIfe, values his western possessions (he owns, besid rteketa, 20,000 acres in the Loup country) above all other He holds the most onthusi- astic hopes of the future of the trans- Missouri country, and entert magnificent plans for its futuro do- velopment. ~ His friends have always regarded his interest in the western country as a kind of insanity. A good | many people regard a rich man who has any thoughts or aspirations be- yond sitting like Atropos, and for- over chipping coupons as she cuts the thread of life, as ¢ Mad and a fool, my masters, mad and a fool This madness has in it, however, the method to make ranching a hand- some paying business investment, He appears to poksess the enviable |1 faculty of - surrounding himself by people adaped to ying out his plans, and he recognizes, in the most liberal fashion, theirsuceess in doing it. Mr. C. A. Hibbert, the in chargo of Arteketa ranch, and Mr. Bookwalter's partuer m tho sheep- C 86 00 upwards; Ladies Wool Shawls, §100 upwards; Ladios i [ Ulsters, $3 60 upwards, and 95 cents OSTON STORE 614-616 TENTH STREET. Ladies' Beaver Dolmans 86 00 upwards; Lanios' Beaver Dlaaks‘ 1 Lot Black Cashmeres, all wool, 40 inches wide, 50, 65, 75, 85 Extraordinary Value, 1 Lot Engiish Cashmeres, all Shados, reduced to 87 1- conts, 4 Oasos tanton Flannels, 8 1-3, 10 and 12 1-3 cents, 4 Bales 4-4 Sheetings, 71-2 conts per yard, by the piece. 1 Case Prints, new styles, 5 conts. 6 Cases Bod Comforts and Blankets at Bottom Prices, Jhoviots, Ginghams, Ticks, Denims, Tablo Linens, Towels, Bed Spreads, &e., at Popular Prices, Misscs', Boys' and Childrens’ Shoes 20 per cent lower than any Shoe Store in Omaha. IC1AL.~1 Lot Splendid Shirting Flannels, 92§ cents per yard, worth 35 cehts, P. G. IMLAH, Manager, Leader of Popular Prices. Ladi ranching, is a Boston man, who has spent eighteen years of his life in South America, ten yours of it as a wool me: it in Buenos Ayres, and cight years in the intorior of the sheep ranches. Mo natwrally knows a few points about sl nd is be sides & cultured aud el t gentle- man, His w was Miss Wade, of Minnesota, a lady not yet 50, who at the ago of 23 was at the head of the schools of the Argentine Confedera- tion. Both possess brilliant social qualitios that, far from being lost in the frontier, make the mansion house ab Arteketa a place of pilgrimago for friend and stranger whom the fame of it has reached. In cattle and sheep raising, moro than any other industry, lies the great wealth of the future, for it is live stock the civilized world wante; in it the farmer finds wealth, and the mar- ket open to him is as wide as tho civ ilized world, TFancy, too, the added delight of living in a climate which develops every wholesome fiber of the | © body, and where a buckskin rig and a a soft felt hat, ‘‘reared up in front,” is full dress in the best socioty. This ranch life, if half what is told of it be true, is what the old Greoks prefigured whon they made the my about exhausted Hercules renewing his strength at the touch of earth’s moiher —the charm for the modern Hercules lies in either the shepherd’s crook orin the larint of the cattle rancher. THE GREAT WESTERN CLOTHING HOUSE, M. HELLMAN & CO,, Spring Suits | All Styles ! IMMENSE STOCICAT WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. The Largest Clothing House West of Chicago A Department for Children’s Clothing. We have now an’assortment of Clothing of all kinds, Gent'e Furnishing Goods in great variety,and a heavy stock of Trunks, Valises, Hats, Caps, &o. These goods are fresh, purchased from he manufacturers, and will be sold at prices lower than eve before made, We Seil for Cash and Have but One Price. A large TAILORING FORCH is employed by uz, and wem h | SUITE TO ORDER on very short notice, CALIT: ANID SIE Wik, 130l and 1303 Farnham St., cor. 13th s, [Srene . A POLACK, oSoline The Law of Kindness, Is universal; it affects all the human Cheyenne‘ i 4 00|0rad° family, all animals, and 1 be even found in patent medicines. me are drastic mul the patient is obliged to suf- fer pains worse than the disease; cases of obstinate constipatic pepsia, there is no remedy 50 knd, so gentle in its effects, and yet so satisfactory as Buk- > Brerers, Price $1.00, trial but in Bucklin’s Arnica Salve. The best salve inthe world for cuts, bruises, sorcs, ulcers, salt rheum, fover sores, tetter, chapped hands, chillblains, corns and all kinds of skin eruptions. This salve is guar- anteed to give perfect satisfaction in every case or money refunded. Price, 25¢ per box. For sale by H & McManoN, Omaha. To Nervo.s Sufterers THE GREAT EUEPEAN REMEDY, Dr. J. B. Sin;aon‘s Bpecific IMIEIIDICIDE. 1t f9 & posjtive cure for Spermatoirhes, Seming Weokneas, Impotancy, and all discasos rosulting from Solf-Abuso, as Mental Anxiety, Loss: Memaory, Paina in the Back or Side, and diseascs W that lead to Consuniption {neanity and AVIRN be with wondor. ful success, Pamphlots 4 got full par. Write (0F Lhons A, ticulars, Price, Speclfic, §1.00 per package, or six pack agos for 80.00, Address all orders to L. SIMSON MEDICINE ¢ Nos. 104 and 108 Main §t. Bufalo Sold in Omaha by C. F. Goodman, J. 1K Inh, and all droggistsorory wh W i, Satisfaction Guaranteed. Spring and Summer CLOTHING!I LATE AND NOBBY STYLES FOR MEN, BOYS AND GHILDREN. Hats, Caps, Trunks, Valises. | CLOTEIING MAIDDE TO ORDERE IN THE LATEST STYLES, Prices to Suit all | 1322 FARNHAM STREET, ) NEAR FOURTEENTH aHCAwl o, AGENTS WANTED FOR Fastisr Seitixa Books oF 11k Aow ! Foundations of Success BUSINESS AND SOCIAL FORMS, The laws of trade, logal forms, how to trany. act business, valuable tabl parlian how plote Guid duct p all cises, s and spoc €0., Bt.Louls, Mo, DISEASES ~—OF THE— EYE & EAR DR.L. B. GRADDY, Oculist and Aurist, LATE OLINICAL ABSISTANT IN ROYAL LONDON OPHTHALMIC HOSPITAL. References all Reputalye Physicians of Omaka, #4 Office, Corner 16th and Farnham 6t Omaha, Neb. i aut To Dnntrnut:r-._flumlrl " and Property Owners. The undersiynod having been af for the extensive iron aid wire houses of K. 1. Barnum, of De y B Itussel Iron Foundry and Works at Toledo, Ohlo, capacity of 0 tons daily, s prepared turnish estimatos aud price &c., &, for store fronts, window caps and sl threshold plates, wrought iron buatis and gir ers, hydraulic elevators, staplo tittings,| pulley siafting, &c.; also iron fences, cresting, vi dow guirds, ‘shutters, stairs, bajconics, settoos, chaits, vases, acquarlums, fountains, summer houses, lawn, garden and ' cemetery ornaments, , gravo guards, &c., & In endloss Catalogues suj pplicd on ppileation. HERKY 51 “BRIRY nnfacturery’ Agent, 92 Pearl strect, aug10 1 me Councll Blufly, Towa ointed agent J. A, WAKEFIELD, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Lath, Shingles, Pickets, SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOLDINGS, Lif‘E, CEMENT LA S8TEE, IO, SAETATE AGENL FOI MILWAUKEE OFAMY NTJCOMPANY, OMAHA, imn 0. H. BALLOU, —DEALER I e T INVECTER R R, Lath and Shingles, Yard and Office 15th and Cumings Street, two blocks north of ST. PAUL. AND OMAHA DEPOT, jyl-eod-3m,