Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 17, 1881, Page 2

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| | e SUTTON. Banger Pays a ,Visit to that Protty City, The Running and Trotting As- gociation Meeting. Facts About the Town ns It isand as It May Be. Correspendence of The Be Surroy, Neb., September 14.— Sutton in the early days of the B. & M. had a fight with its railroad, which was almost the exact counterpart of the Blue Springs. In due time Sut ton won the battle and it has prospered ever since, although at one time it was generally belioved that the town would go under. The census of 1880 credits it with 1,000 inhabitants and it has ganed largely since Uncle Si counted noses. A HAIL STORM created havoe here and greatly de- pleted the farm products, but this ac- cident has taken only a percentage of the yield i this vicinity and the farmers are now very busy Plllll'kclll)g a heavy surplus of small grain, THE SUTTON (ROVE, This is the pride of Sutton and well the people may be proud of those giant trees that form the only spot of natural forest in all the vast prairie that surrounds the town. To this grove comes the picnickers and ex cursionists from the wind swept prai- xie towns of the surrounding plains. THE VETERANS' REUNION. Next year it is said that some west- ern town will get the reunion, and if that is so ‘‘Ranger” nominates Sutton as the place par excellence. Here thero will be no lack of good, healthy water. A vast extent ot open prairie sufficient for the manouvers of the armies of Europe and America atretches away to tho east, beginning might at the edgoe of town. And the grove —what a delightful spot for the children to romp in, for lovers to meet, and old veterans to congregate? Think of the swings, the slade, the music of the wind in the branches. The chance for camp fires vith a leafy shelter that defies the high winds; the beautiful brook that flows through the grove, and the thrifty town not two blocks away. THE PEOPLE OF SUTTON are of the class that will mako the soldier feel at home. They are large- ly soldiers themsclyes, ands they sent more veterans to the reunion, it is said, than any town on the main line of the B. & M Sutton supports a fine post of the G. A. R., and per- haps the best militia company 1n the state. One of the most commodious buildings in town is the new armory of this company, Some of the most influential and popular men in Ne- braska are residents of Sutton, and they will put forth every effort in be- half of their guests fhoukl the next reunion be their's. Lot the soldiers meet’at Sutton, and tho Republican Valley veterans will be thero en mass. An energetic effort on the part of western posts of the G. A, R. will undoubtedly giva the reunion to a central'western town, and if Omaha is mot to have it, then I vote for Sutton first, last and all the time. THE SUTTON RUNNING AND TROTTING AS~ BOCIATION have cards out for a meeting on the 27th and 28th of this month, and have a total of $525, in six purses. The conditions are: five to enter, three to start; entrance fee, 10 per cent cash down before starting; all purses pay- able on the spot as soon as the judges can make decisions; running according to Lexington rules; trotting to be governed by national association rules. J. T. Mojlyneaux is the man to writo to, as he is the ‘‘scratchetary” of the society. Pool selling will take place, 80 that the boys will have a chance to back their fuvoritvs in the favorite manner, i THE FARMERS' ALLIANCE has decided that Clay county can get along without an alliance ticket, and the anti-monopoliats will fight tho bat- tle within the old party lines. Nelse O. Alberts, a young gentle- man of deserved popularity, will have the full lup{)un of our side in the coming republican convention as can- didate for treasurer, and the gentleman,” After the fierce midsummer, all abl; a great deal of the small grain as com- pletely as if it had been done by ma- chinery, is causing some debt-laden and faint-hearted fermers to go into liquidation and sell out. men would eall it “failing,” and now men with a little means have rave chances for getting the richest land in Nebraska very cheap, and also for buy ing farm outfits advantageously. Mr. L. D. Fowler, the B. & M. agent and partner with Mr. Cowles in the Sutton bank, is doing quite a business in wild and cultivated lands, The sur- face of the eountry is simply perf It is well watered by crecks and rnvu- lets, and is just rolling enough to se- cure the proper drainage. Tho soil is 1 depth and has in it ¢11 the wponent parts neces for pro- ucing the hest crops of corn, small grain and fruits, This year's crops are, of course, no standard to judge by, it being a notoriously bad year, and yot, where the hail left anything, the yield of wheat seldom falls below ten bushels to the acre, and corn will averago ab least forty bushels to the acre, A SPECIMEN FARM. In company with Captain Young, of the Governor's guards, your cor- respondent paid a flying visit to the home of one of the old-time Nebraska farmers, who lives about a mile south of Sutton. T forget the namo of the gentleman we visited, but he was one of the bluff, hearty and kindly men of New England, who form our best class of citizens, The farm was a model. The towering trees that em- bowered the house wero set out at the commencement, yeas ago and now they answer all the pur- poses of a natural forest grove. The birds sing in the branches, the winds ave broken by the barrier, the shade covers the ground, and it will not be long before an abundance of fire wood will be obtained by the necessary thinning, to make way for larger growth. The house was elegant and roomy. The mansard roof and the compact form were evidences of a cor- rect taste. Inside, the furniture and the wall adornments were homelike and comfortable All in all it was a good evidence of what educated industry and persever- ance will doin this great prairie state, The farmer's son was at the reunion as lioutenant of the Sutton militia company, and his glossy blue uniform with gilt buttons sct off his mauly beauty in fine style, but on the Mon- day following he was again ““The Farmer's Boy,"” with straw hat, well- worn and faded overshirt and overalls. He did not look like the same man who was two days before “‘the officer Republican Amorica can truly be proud of the rank and file of her citizenship that can thus fill any position with equal independence and grace. For business review see Gth page. RANGER. Friendship After Love. ELLA WHEBLER, aze, Has burned itself to ashes, and expires In the intensity of its own res, There come the mellow, mild St. Martin's calm of peace, but sad with haze, S0 after love has lod us till ho tires Of hisown throes and torments an Aesires, Comes large-eyed Friendship; with a rest- ful gaze He beckons to follow; and acros+, Cool; verdant vale, we wander free from care, Is it_n touch of frost lies in the air? \Vlhy are we haunted with a sense of osa? Wedo not wish the ‘min back, or the heat; Axd yet, and yet—t| hese days are incom- plete. HONEY FOR 1HE LADIES. . f Now bonnets are small, Byron collars are not stylish. High coiffures are worn again, New lingerio pins have star heads. Chaudron, or copper color, is the now red, Plush flounces like fur are on new cos- tumes, Colored Spanish laces are fmported for autumn, Shirts of gray striped plush will be worn by young ladies, Stylish cloves have wrinkled wrists and are tan colored. Red and green will bo the fashionable contrasts of colors, Baby sashos tied high in the back are adopted by young ladies, Silver gray and amber-tinted satin dresses are very fashionnble, Natural flowers which do not quickly ade are worn upon opera hats, Monkey-head buttons ave to rival owl's heads for young women's dresses, Shrimps, turtls, grasshoppers and Mr. James Wheolor is the anti- monopoly candidate tor nomination as county clerk on the republican ticket. T have not heard who 18 on the track against them, but the railroads must mask their batteries with bogus anti’s, or they can't stand the ghost of a show for winning in Clay county. IMPROVEMENTS, Hawley's elevator has introduced steam powor, and the boys chipped in and bought a stean whistle, so that Sutton and all the surrounding coun- try might know the time to begin and quit work, and also have the call “from labor to refreshments” given by steam, Dr. Martin Clark has got a tele- phone to connect his house and store, and the helloing for beefstake and potatoes is conducted in metro- politan style, THE RUSSIAN MENNONITES, with their hay burning furnaces, in- dustrious and economical habits, odd looking houses and well ecultivated farms wco becoming important factors in Sutton and surrounding country, They have settled down to the practi- cal gvery-day life of the Nebraskian and geem to hke ‘their new homes, As a rule they are deing well and making money, Most of them have loarned to make themselves under- stood in English and with very fow oxceptions they have discarded the outlandish style of clothing they brought across the sea, Already they are beginning to take a hand in poli- tics, and before many years their solid vote will tell heavily in the scale of litical wfluence. ~ The anti-monopo- ly side is the one on which the Mon nonite vote will be cast, KEAL EATATE, The chances for profitable invest ment hove and hereabouts are unex in all the central Nebrask The severe hail storm that harvested beetlos, are among the ornaments for new bonnets, Gold or silver lace, with gold or silver ornaments, continue to form the decoia- tions of many elegant dress bonnets, J. W. Riley has a poem *‘The Lost Kiss." He doesn't make it very plain as to how he lost it, butitis presumed her mother canie into the room just in time to cateh him at it,—| Rochester Express, From Michigan the story comes That & man of Keene, Ionia county, offered his d-lflhter $10 if she would climb to the top ot the church steeple and hurrah for Bob Ingersoll ~ The Saranae Local says that ghe won tho $10, An oxtrome agony” o (oF & Yo lndy to add to her tollet'n large sunflower at her belt. The oceult signification of this isi “T always turn toward the son—of some rich nan,” Tsn't there a touch of the intense ubout this? A pretty French cireular fan is made of black satin, hand-painted in water lilies, reods and feutliery grason, I the eentro ate too large huniming birds perched upon o branch of red rasplierries, The haudle is of oriental jeb {nlaid with mock rubies, New fall bonnets in the poke shape are made of rich dark-colored plushes shot with gold and trivawed with bunches of short ostrich tips powdered with gold. The inside of the bonnets are faced with gaily tinted satins that harmonize with 1 Degan one of lectures recently with the remark: *Whenever | ty girl 1 want to clasp her in my “So (do we,” shouted the bLoys in the gallery. For a woment Olive was non- plused, Lit, reehvering her self-possesion, she replicd! “Well, boys, I dow't blame you. At present the great fad of the females i for Jovely stockings and nobby &l A wilk hose are the favorites, into o lot rows of Chantilly oe Mal- At Long Brauch ladies do it Luy black silk stockings and of handsome lace over the in It's not going to be very expensive to dress well this winter, Ladies can no longer put twenty-five or thirty yards of ik in o dre heyare to be made very roidered with ehenille or ¢ the ground ten or Business || twelve inches (according to the foot of the wearer.) I preminm to the lady exhibiting a ahy that most resembles’ himn.” There must haye heen some trouble about this announcement, for now the Gazette cor. rects itself ax fo! Ten dollars to the ady exhibiting a Id most resembling her * the throat the speaker and said his sister was as modestly dressed a8 there was ot the beach, and if ker didn't take lback his remark gizo, he'd got his heal yank he young lady residing who took the 8200 pri kport, recently, for being the hand- in the state, has gone crazy. ty is the result of too much notoriety on a weak mind. s to be n 1o an asylum for the troubled of the ,, which the physicians aseert is due in no small degree to” the vse of certain acids to stain or color her hair. Said he: ‘‘An me better than all the world besi " said she. “And you love mo better than said Ces, dearen you wouldn't think any more of me if I was worth & million dollars?” Said she: “Noj and if [was a rich heiress, you wouldn't want to marry me any more than you do now?” “No, darling.”” They were not lying gentle reader; they were simply courting; that was all, Pelerines will b very fashionably worn for some weeks to coma in place of any other outside garment. They are the vogue both for day and_evening wear, and are cut'plain or are shivred about the neck as the wearer may prefer, either style beine equally fashionuble, In cold weather they will continue to_be woi v juckets ana other wraps. They are made of plush. Vi t, satin or cashmere, trimmed h beaded passementerie, or fine eilk gimps and cords, Among the new dress materials moire antique bids fair to take the lend as the choicest novelty; while surah silk, satin merveilieux and Indian cashmeres display an ever new variety of design in_the astonishing combination of narrow stripes, plaide and figures, Dark Lrown, green and grey are combined with all the bright hues of the rainbow, the sombre stripe or tint forming a foundatien as it were for an increase in tor yet mellowing and softening the whle. An innovation is made this fall in all the vvr{ dark shades which have prevailed by the introdnction of bronze hues, which in varions tones, Loth in dress and milli- nery, will be very fashionable, Not only the bronze colors will be prominent, but all the different shades of brownish yel- lows, yellowish greens and bronze browns, to say nothing of pure yellows, both light and dark, and all clors showing a trace of this hue, from the terra cotta and deep ecru shades, to the delicate buff, lemon, straw, sulphur, and particularly the green- ish yellows and mastic tints which have so much regard in the wsthetic world of art and fashion abroad Second Editlion of Job. Mrs Ogden, N, Division street Buffalo, says: *‘I cannot be tvo thankful that T was induced to try your SPRIse BLOSSOM, I was at one time afraid I should never be able to get out again. I seemed to be a second edition of Job without his pa- tience; my face and hody were one vast collection of boils and pimples; since tak- ing one bottle our Spring’ Blossom 1 i hatbe catod L eru HoBk Heve disap- [n red, and 1 feel better than T have ina s time,” Price 50 cents, trial bottles 10 cents, TRUE TO HER I'RUST. Too much cannot be said of the ever faithful wife and mother, con- d | stantly watching and caring for her dear ones, never neglecting a single duty in their behalf, When they are assailed by disease, and the system should have a thorough cleansing, the stomach and bowels regulated, blood purified, malarial poison exterminated, she must know that Electric Bitters are the only sure remedy. They ar the best and purest medicine in the world, and only cost fitty cents, Sold by Ish & McMahon. 2) —épecial Ordinance No, 268, — Levying anpecial tax for curbing and gut ering Faruham street from t e «ast curb of 15th str ot to the cen er of 15th Street, in the city of Owal Pe it ord Omal SkCTroN 1, That special tax to the amount of (83,600.40) ‘threo shousand five hunared and s x- ty-nine dollars and forty cents, which being the cost and expense of curbing and guttering Farn- ham streot from tie east curb of 16th street to d by the city council of the city of the conter of 18th strect, bo and the same 1y hereb he lots that are boundi g «r abut vements accord ng to Byron Reed' wp which corresponds with A, D, Jone's map a8 tho first and origl al map and plat of the ke city of Omaha, to-wit: ] EI- | 139 e L T T € S0, 2. Buch special tax #hall be due in thirty (80) duys frow the passage aud approval of thiy ordinance. Bre 8. This ondinance shall take effect and be in fore from aud atter ity passage, THOS. DAILEY, Atiost: 1 . DAL Pres't City Coundid J. 3. L. €, Jewwrr, ty Clerk, Passed Sept. fth, 1881, Approved Scpt. §th, 1851, JAMES E. BOYD, ayor. Tha above tax becomes delinquent on the 9th i day of Otober, 1581 After which date ten It ¢ penalt and interost at ths 1ate of one per cent. per month, payable in advance, will bo added. “Ra N TE, casurer, w1045t City AGENTS WANTED FOR OREATLVE RCIENCE aud Sexual Philosophy, Protuse y 1 1iusrated, hemost hopoviant urd ooet book pubiisted, Rvery fewily wante it Extrordinary miuvemonts offered Agents, "' 8t. Louis, Mo AR Great German FOoR il REEUMATISH, NEURALGIA, SCIATICA, LUMBAGO, BACKACHE, GouT, SORENESS or T Mre. J. €. Robertson, Pittshurg, Pa., writes: I CHEST, was suffering from general debility, want of ap. , constipation, ete., 80 that fi'e wasa bur SORE THROAT, after using Burdock Blood Bitters I felt bot- * [ tor than for years, 1 cannot pralse your Bitters QUINSY, |toomuch.” el SWELLINGS |50k G oot et i ol o L P R GPRATNS, | marked with Siceecs: Tha with best results, for torpi ! ense of a friend of mine suffer 1l FROSTED FEET | (5o s mars cloi. i % Brice Turner, Rochester, N. V. jwrites:™I have EARS, been subject to' serious disorder of the kidneys, and unable to attend to business; Burdock Blood BUILINEG | Giitors rollove me bofore lalf bottle ws us A I tee] confident that they will entirely cure o SCALDS, i : E+ Asenith Tall, Binghampton, N. Y., writes: GENERAL “ red with o dull pain throngh dny feft dny. Took your Burdock Plood Bitters as di- i rected, and Niave fe t no pain since first week af. TOOTH, EAR | {300 thom. axp Mr. Noah Rates, Elmira, N, Y., writes: “About HEADACHE, four years ago I had anattack of billous tever, and Anp never fully My digestive organs were weakened, and I woul ompletely pros- trated for days. Alter using two bottles of your Burdock Blood Bitters the improvement was so visible that I was astonished. - 1 cannow, though 01 years of age, doa fair and - reasonable day's work." i All other Paing ‘fl‘ fitt it AND 0 Preparation on earth squals . lnlll U] r and l‘nl‘“'l }| i el C. Blacket Rohinson, proprietor of The Canada G Xt Presbyterian, Toronto, Ont., writes: “For years 1 I suffcred greatly from o inge headach DIKXCTIONS IX RLEVEN'EAROUAURS: used your Burdock Blood Bitters with happiest $910 BY ALL DRUGOISTS AND DEALERS 1N MIDICINE | reculty, and I now find mysell in better health . VOGELER & CO. than for years past.” i Datimora M U B A | vy, Wallacs, Bultalo, N. Y, ‘writes: 1 have TETT used Burdock Blood Bitfers foe nervous and bil- lious headaches, and can recommend it to anyone CELEBRATED ® | requiring a cure for billiousness,” Mrs. Ira Mullholland, Albany, N. Y, writes: ‘‘For several years 1 have suffered from oft-recur- ring billious” headaches, dyspepsia, and cos plaints peculinr to my 'sex. Since’ using your Burdock Blood Bitters 1 am entirely relieved.” 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, Goodmar., je 27 eod-me LEGAL NOTICE, John McFadden will take notic 10th of August, 1381, the Peace, of 15t pre +ued an order of attachment for thesu in an action pending before him, whe: Kratz s 1 that pro that on the Justicoof , Donglas Co! k p. m, 0 KRATZ, Plautiff. ARN ER ough S Z - Joint Anpipneh Shalen mvfit‘lfillu* remitt | X 4 tent, the system may yet be freed from tne ma- | State of Nebraska, Douglas County, ss: lignant virus with Hostetter's Stomach Bitters. | Ata County Court, held at the County Court Protect the systom against it with this benefi- | Koom, in‘and for said County, Aupust 1st, A. cent anti-spasmodic, which is furthermorea su- | D. 1891 Preseut, HOWARD B, SMITH, premo romedy for liver complaint. constipation, [ County Judge. 4 dyspepsia, debility, rheumati-m, kidney trou- | In o Lo SEEa L O U ORCP LA EN el PROBATE NOTICE. bles and other ilments. son, dece 247 For salo by all Druggists and Dealors gen- | On reading and filing tho yetition of Martha erally. ] . Nelson, i that the instrument, pur- 1 copy of the filed in this Court, may be allowed and recoraed, o i ed, and of the probate thercof, by the Circuit Court of Isso' s"onT LINE' |880' Fourtain County, State f Thalant, and this day +XANSAS CITY, a8 the last will and tostament of said Joseph H. i Nelson, deceased, in and for the State of Ne: . y braska, [IB fiun(} Q | " Oriored, That August 2ith, A, D. 1581, at 10 h N [ o'clock n, m., Is assigned for hearing said petitio en all petons intorested in said matter may RAILINO.AT appearat o County Court to bo held, in and for 1 Tm oNLY said County, and show cause why the prayer of i s ey | petitionershould not be granted; and that notice Direct Line to ST. LOUII/B of the peidency of sad petition and the hearing AND THE EAST thereol, ho given to all porsons interested in said 3 matter, by publishing a copy of this order in Tux From Omaha and the West. OMAIA' WERKLY BER, & newspaper printed in said County, for three successive weeks, prior to said No change of cars betwoen Omaha and aw, vouls, | day o° hearin and but one between OMAIA and (A frue copy.] HOWARD B. SMITH, NEW_YORK, wug10-w3t SIX County Judge. x Daily PassengerTrains| To Nervous Sufterers RRACHING ALL oy OTHER LINES, AL Dr. J. B. Simpson’s Specific THE GREAT EUROPEAN REMEDY. This eutire line s equipped with Pullman's Palace Sleoping Cars, vam Conches, Millor's DEEID X CX DT EL. Satety Platform and’ Coupler, and the celobrated | Tt Is a posjtive cure for Spermatoi rhea, Semina Westinghonse Air-brake, Weokneas, Impotancy, and all diseases resulting £arsee that your ticket reads VIA nANSAS [ from Solf-Abuse, as Mental Anxicty, Loss: CITY, 8T, JOSEPH & COUNCIL BLUFFS Rail- | Mewory, Pains fn the Back or §ide, and diseasee roud, vin St. Joseph and St. Louis. e that lead to ’(‘Amsumptlon i Ticketa for sale at all coupon stations In the Vest. nsanity and ¢ J. F. BARNARD, L DAWES, | Gen, Supt, St. Joseph, Mo \ [ earlygrave . Pass, and Ticket Agt., St. Joseph, Mo The Specific + AXDY Bowors, Ticket Agent, 9 Medicino s 1020 Farnham stroet. |being used A. B. BanmaRD General Agent, $ |with wonder. OMAH. tul wiccoss. .17 Pamphlets sent free to all, Wrlto for thom and get full par- DIS EASE S |[fm e s or s pe —OF THE— ages for §5,00. ‘Addroms all orders to Xi EYE & EAR e Nos, 104 and 106 Main St. Buffalo, N, Y. DR. L. B. GRADDY, 8old in Omaha by C. F. Goodman, J. W, Bell, J. K Ish, and all druggistseverywhere. Oculist and Aurist, LATE CLINICAL ABSISTANT IN ROYAL _» S8-dawlv. 1f you are & man of bu: (ness, weak ‘ened by tho strain of LONDON OPHTHALMIO HOSPITAL. your ‘duties nvoid night work, o rex Refercices o Reputablo Physicians of Omaha, “«;‘u;l-smg;‘._‘"" ey uro HOP By #£470fMce, Corner 16th and Farnham 8 from any In | it you aroyoune and Omaha, Neb auZbmet! AGENTS WANTED FOR ¥astest SeuuiNe Books or 1in Aok | i an iAE v o R EyEiEn ing. or stmulating, ESS S without fntoxicating, BUSINESS AND SOCIAL FORMS. tako Ho The laws of trado, logal forms, how to trans- | Bitters. sct businees, valuable "tables, social etiquette | prav yondys- parliamientary usage, how to conduct public busi- | - pepaia, * kidney, s 1n fuct {18 & complete Guide fo Bucoens for | Srairinary cont all cases. A family necessity, Address for cir. | plaine, dlscas aulare and special torms ANCHOR PUBLISHING | £ the sf0icds Whhley Mo fver OF nerves. pave e ¥ 8 i B * Wopsittera CRENTITY) D. I C. 1s an absolute and” roistn BT . LOUILS You will be| cured If you uso| Hop Bitters PAPER WAREHOUSE., | uyouspm | Bacprare: T)ll pirited, try| Clreular, CRAHAM PAPER 00, 7si-iiill paIL |2 217 and £19 North Main St., St. Lows, saved hun ~=WUOLENALN DEALKAS IN— - SEWE, %QAPE?& %;fi&’;;.-u«'a B i GHB . ENVELOP! CAl AR Printers Stock. m“(,}{gu wux-:s ERN 1o Conh S 5E AR A, Taves Qicel, Sern QEO. R. RATHBUN, Principal, Creighton Block, il & & Toronto, Ont. ewer Pipe. Orrice Or Ciry CLERK, OxAlA, Nob , Bopt. 8, 1851 Soalo proposals will be rocelved by tho undor- signed ot hiv office up to 12 m., of Tuesday, Soptember 13th, 1881, for the entire or part of the List of sowsi pipe of the hest quality and to be de Ivered at Omaha, subjoct fon- s per specification In the city en r's office 17,001 foet of 6-inch vitrified Pipo, saltglaze; 1100 foot of 16- vitrified ciay Pibe, walteiclaze; 9001 ix by four dneh Y for howso conlection; 170 six Inch hand holes, Also 000 foet of 16 inch cast iron water pipe. All bids to specify how soon delivery of material can bo bo- gun and comploted part or Iu toto, The ol any orull bids or part of bids is | | 3. L COJEWETT P3-10t ity Clerk. SIBBETT & FULLER, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, DA VID CITY, NEB, Special attention glaen o collections in Butler covit e home w o Paber Stock Warchouses 1220 to 1287, North — OMAHA, PR NEBRASKA. BYRON RNED, WEWIBRRED | gar-Send for Circular nov_ 20d&wt! BYRON REED & CO. . ity WANTED! &ihadhefty leomne 5 T OLDAKT RSTABLISUND vorsal Knowledge, Complete Cyclopudia of Achievement of the Age, It has 1o cowpetitors, IN NEBRASKAY Wo want competent Solicitors. No peddlers Keep a complete absteact of title to all Real need apply Circulars, - giving foll desription, Estate in Omaha and Douglas county. mayt | 30t on application, 1. CHAMBERS, DexterL, Thomas&Bro, sm&e d&wlm Geo. P. Bemis WILL BUY AND SELL RANAY, EIfS.A Pay Taxes, Rent Houses, Etc, 0 This g does sTRICTLY & broke busi: R0 WANT 10 AUY 08 06 Docs not spsculate, and therefore any bargains re 'insured to its patrous, instesd Call at Olce, Boow 8, Crelghton Block, Omaha, | an te boo Apb of being vobbled up by the avent HEADQUARTERS FOR. MEN'S FURNISHING GOODS. We desire to call the special attention ot the trade to our elogant lines (at BOTTOM PRICES) of Underwear, Cardigan Jackets and Scarfs, Buck Gloves, Overshirts, Overalls Hoesiery, &e., now open. Wholesale ouly, SHREVE, JARVIS & CO,, Cc_)_rruwererourteepth and Dodge Sts. WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS. ISH & McMAHON, 1406 DOUGLAS STREET, MAHA, NEB. The Only Hxclusive Wholesale Drug House in Nebraska SPECIAL ATTENTION PAID TO MAIL ORDERS. FEARON & COLE, Commissson Merchants, 1121 Farnham St.,, Omaha, Neb. Consignments made us will receive prompt attention. References: Stato Bank, Omaha; Plats & Co., Baltimore; Peck & Bansher, Chicags: Me Werk & Co., Cincinnati, St e 1. OBERFELDER & CO,, IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS OF MILLINERY & NOTIONS, 1308 and 1310 DOUGLAS STREET. OMAETA, - - - NEBRASE.A. The only exclusive wholesale house 1n this line in the west. F.C. MORG-AN. WHOLESALE GROCER, 1213 Farnham St., Omaha, Neb. Arim tiff and John McFadden defendant, ety consisting ot houschald turiturd and implements has been attached under said order. Eaid cause was continued to 21st of [-3 OMLAFELA.. Guns,Ammunition,Sporting Goods FISHING TACKLE, BASE BALLE, and a FULL LINE OF NOTIONS AND FANCY CO0ODS. ° EEND FOR FPRICE-LIS. MAX MEYER & CO., Omaha, Ne J. B. Detwiler’s CARPET STORE. The l érgest Stock and Most Com- plete Assortment in The West. We Keep Everything in the Line of Carpets, O: cioths, Matting, Window-shades, Fixtures and Lace Curtains. WE HAVE COODS TO PLEASE EVERYEGDY.. REMEMERX WIXE PX.A X3, }313 thm $t.__, Omah@. WM. F. STOETZEL, Dealer in Hardware, Cooking Stoves TIN W ARH. Reau ESTATE ACENSY, gtove Bonairer, Jub Worker and Manufacturey OF ALY, EEINDS OF CANS. Tenth and Jacksen ®te. - - - Omaha, Neb

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