Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 5, 1881, Page 3

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] | NIAGARA. The Attractions of the Fall This Time of the Year. at The Usual Numbor of Brides and Grooms -Some Historioal Points. Correspon-dence of the Globe-Democrat. Niagara Fatts, September 28, By grace of the brides and grooms and the everlasting excursionists Niagara runs its season for more than halt of the year, and, though it once was o watering placo and summer resort, as such places areunderstood, the citizens of the place now sadly sure you that that has all gone by, Since it is all the fault of their own grasping policy, no one need eommis erato thom, The centenmal year marked the beginning of the excur- sion era, and each scason since has seen thousands more taking a look at the falls—Dby train loads, personally conducted parties, and holders of the yard long tickets that the railroads| sell to vacation travelers, The hotel | keepers, the citizens, and the hack- | men despise and speak scornfully of | the excursionists, and the glib ven- | doys-of the local curiosities and souv- enirs lament over the lost trade, The excursionists spend no money here | they say, a contradiction on the vi e ot it, when thero is a taxor a toll, a fee or a fare at every point. The project of a Natioual park is one that has been considerably agita- ted by the outside public lately, without receiving great favor or vetus from the inhabitants of the vil- lage. To have the state condemn the land along the banks of the river, buy it at appraisers’ valuation and keep it free to all the world as a Na- tional park, like the Yellowstone or the Yosemite, is so’ plainly what ought to be done that there is great danger of its never being accomplished. The first suggestion in the matter cameo_from Mr. Walter, of the Lon- don Times, during his visit here in 1876. He proposed to have the Canadian and United States govern- ments take measures to preserve and protect the falls by means of a park along both banks of the river above and below the falls. Lord Duf- ferin, while governor general, was warmly interested in the scheme, and it was hoped that before he left some- thing would really be accomplished by the Canada side. ~ On our own side it once went 8o far as to have a commt- tee of the state legislature examine and return an illustrated and hand- somely bound report, but a veto from Governor Coraell ended the matter at that time. Outside enthusiasts are now trying to revive interest in the plan, and a great deal is being said and written. The Canadians have no need to make such haste, for their side of the river is free to the hum- blest to take a look at the great cata- ract, a public road running along the edge of the bank; but on the United States border there is every kind of an abomination. For an example of the fee and admission system, there is nothing in_Europe to half approach Niagara Falls. Municipal law has taken hold of the hackm n vigorously, and so broken their spirits that car- riage hire at Niagara is cheaper than any place elso in the country, and ouly the greenest and most unwary of the tourists ever has any trouble, On this side they gravely warn you agamst the Canadian drivers, and claim that the sad reputation of the Niagara hackmen came from their im- vositions. While on the Canadian side they say that theiz drivers are all wood, and that the United States pro- tects and fosters the bad ones. THE WISE OLD SURVEYOR who bought the islands in_the river and the point of laud at the edee of the fall, on this side, prepared an in- heritance for his children more cer tain than Govermuent bunds, and for years the money has been rolling into their coffers. Any one who wants to get even the half-view that this bank of the commands must eithev go into prospect Park or cross to Goat Island, and, by the tax laid on, the descendants of Col. Porter thnve, All the year round there are tourists in town, and as they must pay to go up- stairs and down inclined planes and to look at the water, these peoplo aro hardly desirous of selling their land to the State and cutting short so fine an income. Ttisa sad commentary on our public system, but any one knows that if the State ever empowers a com- mission to condemn, buy and lay out this land along the river that there will be lobbying, robbery, steals, rinys, and iniquity on as colossal a scale as the Falls themselves. It is not pro- posed to drive away the factories and industries of the place by taking up the river banks, but to diverta stream from the main channel above the rap- ids and taking it inland half a mile to provide water power for all who want it. The screen of trees will then shut out all such unsightly features and ve the Falls with the surroundings that they naturally had before paper pulp and flour wills sot up their un- sightliness, The work can not be done too quickly now, smce the Oneida Community has moved itself to Niagara Falls to conduct its business of canuing and preserving fruits at a place that offers such advantages in the way of water power and railroad communication, ~With a factory de- filing this side of the river, they pro- p ose establishing another one on the Canada side, that they may supply the trade of the Frovinces without the burden of the Custom House demands, It is a dream of the millennium, al- most, to think of Niagara as it should be, and the prospect is one so beauti- ful that it is more than likely never to be reached in this world, that thinks more of water power and tourists’ fees than ot the beauties of nature and sub lime scenery, Old Father Hennepin is the visitor that one most envies, and that simple old Jesuit whom the Indiaus led here in 1678, saw the falls in a light th: no later day can approach, Neither from photographs, pictures, books or the mouths of 10,000 tourists liad he obtained any idea of the great cata ract, and instead ot visiting it as p2o ple do nowadays, to decide whether 1t looks like its pictures,” he had al! the freshness and surprise of some- | thing new and overwhelming, He had | itall his own way with his savage guides; could wander at will and tell what stories he choose when he re- | 1 turned, since | the falls, and have the bre | ed out of him b, v one knew enough m{ contradict h No hackman venir-sellors lurked in_ his pathway, and there were no natives with rub- | ber suits to tempt him to go in under | I pound- | the fury of the de-| scending wate A right royal time Fathor Hennepin must have had here, | listening to Indian traditions, and go ing away to tell people that the falls wore six or seven hundred feet high. I'he simple aborigines had their story that the cataract claimed its TWO VICTIMS ANNUALLY, about that many red men in their bark canoes bemg swept into the rap- ids and carried over. The white man has increased the number of victims, and each year there are at least half a dozen who fall in, or, woary of life, leap into the destroying current and wo down that fearful plunge. Sui- cides have chosen it as their jumpin off place for several years, and the hack-drivers are prolitic of thrilling talos and tragic stories. At every few steps they rein in to indicate the spot where a gentleman or lady took the foarful plunge, and tell of the men ught on- st 1 logs | for days, whilo the people rau | G Parshor ac up and down the bunks at their | Sagtroy, and tho wits' ends in their attempts to vescue | » would always pre them. Uncomfortable as it might bo themn, artificial and mechanice to be balancing on the verge of fall, the horrors of the gituation mi be augniented to nervous person by fow thousand people lining the banks | and watching him like tina speculating upon his ¢l the | it | a and waiting to see him go whirling down ances, that white sheet of foam, Lhere is one story at whose end every one feels disappointed. By daylight and at night, when the electricians turn thi zling rays over the rapids, there is visible a huge sign on the end of a log, bidding the public take the ‘‘Erie Railroad.” It is a matter of specula- tion on first sight as to how that great board, with its white lettering on a black ground, and the little fluttering flags ever got out in the middle of the river, and unless the waters them- selves should finally sweep it away, lightning " strike or some one open upon it with a howitzer from the bank, there seems no way to remove the ob- noxious advertisement. It was put there in the winter time by some men who crept out over the rough blocks of an ice gorge, nailed it down and had barely reached the fshore when the ice began to move; just a few min- utes too late as every one thinks on seeing their ineflaceable handiwork. Just now there is a lull in THE TIDE OF BRIDES AND GROOMS, but of course there are a few here, sinco Niagara would not be wishout the turtle doves cooing to the the thunders of its waters. In June, in early, leafy June, the place over- runs with them, and even a few weeks later, in October, there is a rustle of new gowns around the town, and a strolling through the wild seclusion of the islands that makes a veritable ar- cadia of the whole region. The rose- colored lizhts lingers always on the falls for the:e people, and the hack- men in their exuberance only ask for such prey, a little indifferent to the great sights and willing to be photo- graphed against the backgrounds of the falls. It is amusing to watch the different kinds come into the hotel dimmng-rooms; old brides and young brides; plain and modest little brides blushing and conscious in jtheir vew honors and new clothes; and spirited, independent young women, who flaunt their fine plumage and leave all the agonies of tho situation to the poor groom. The plain gold rings have not lost their shine when they get here, but struggling against theiv first im- pulse to enter, arm-in-arm, they tryto saunter down the dining-room as in- differently as if they had always done 80. They never deceive the keen, un- sparing eye of the public, but the pompous old head waiter has a tender spot in his heart, or in his palm, for them, and sometimes puts a pair away off'in'a corner by themselyes with their backs totheroom. Thereisasweetbride T now, a quiet, pretty little thing, with chestnut hair brushed smoothly as satin beside her enrs, and her little gray dress as severely simple as a Quik gown. The groom is an awfully young man, with pale side whiskers, blue eyes and the air and ¢ of a young minister, and the two wandering together through the leafy paths of the island or occupying very smal) part of the long benches, are a picture of a poet’s song. The middle-aged, sandy-haired groom, with a bald head and solid frame, is anything bui such a companion piece to the fresh young thing with a feather turban and brand new dia- mond ear-rings, who takes her dinner beside him, and fumbles with her new gold ring when she putsher gloves on, The electric light is playing havoe with what have been the romantic places of the banks on summer nights, and the wicked electricians turn the blinding fivod of their ligzhts on all the lovers' retreats in tl Down by the Cataract house there covered pavilion, anchored or built in the midst of the rc g rapids, where there is a fipe view of the rushing waters, that seem ready to whirl the whole thing away ata moment's tice, and where the din of the waters dAvownds every othersoundand dizzi the sen From time immemorial the pavilion has been the rightful fief of the brides and grooms aud lovers, who fled the garish hzhts and unsym- pathizing eyes of the duncers and 1dlers in the parlors, and went to the river side. This summer AN ELECTRIC LIGHT has been put on the high porch over- looking the rapids, and the wizurd who manages it, after turning the light on the water, the bridges, the islands and the further Canadian shore, will suddenly whisk the whole force of the ray down upon the little pavilion with startling results. He watches his chances and pounces down upon them at critical moments, and some day the brides and grooms will rise in wrath and piteh the electrician and his machine into the water, and the verdict of a sympathizing publ will be that it served him right. The electric light has destroyed all the stax- ry sentiments about the falls, and the poor, pale moon casts not a feeble ray compared to the dozeus of carbon can- dles thae blaze upon the waters, By night the whole front of the mighty waters is a rippling, foamny sheet of silver, and tho ‘““American Fall,” as by a subtle distinction they call the 8 ad kopt |4 | Park is realized, the ara | P THI OMAHA DAILY BEE: WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 5, 188; tors of ruby melt into emeral, and are lost in a floating mist of amber, and | in the deep blacknees of the river streaks of foam catch the tinted | ligh! Into the horseshoo fall, with | {ts denso spray-clond rising on high, the lights can hardly penetrate, and there 18 oply a wavering cloud of bright mist hovering along the edge of that terrible cataract, The horse- shoe is no longer a horseshoe, the wear of that fearful current having cut it in shaply to a right and almost an acute angle, and the inner partis hardly to be seen through the thick spray that rolls up from the gulf. It is a perfect scene of enchantment when the sun’s last light has faded and the lamps and the Brush machines begin their work. Whole twinkling lines of light along the bank and on that spider’s thread of a bridge that spans the fearful gulf, make a sufli- cient illumination, and with the falls, brilliantly whito, and a light, with rose, ruby amber wators, the semicir clo 18 complete, The dinand perpetu al thunder, the voar that scems always nearer and louder and more over- and the sweet, strong c:of frosh water in the air, take hold of one t powerfully for the National night is better Rumasau, tho aids a ind until than the day. | Sins of the Fathers Vistted on the Children: y that s lous ta'nt can- o eracicated; we deny it “'in toto. 3 ) through a thorough course of Bune Dock Broob Birrers, your blood will get as pury vou can wish, Price 21,00, trial size 10 ¢ odlw ATALK WITH CAPT. EADS. ‘What English Engineers Think About His Proposad Ship Railway—His Visit to Europe. N. Y. Tribune. Capt. Eads talked with a Tribune reporter last evening at the Fifth Avenue hotel about his plans and his visit to Europe. ‘I have only just returned form England,” he said, “where Ihave been for about six weeks. T had the pleasure of meet- ing many of the prominent English en. ineers, and was also present at the jubilee meeting of the Society for the Promotion of Science, which was held at York. At that meeting they in- sisted that I should tell them about the Mississippi jetties and the pro- posed ship railway. T was not pre- pared for such an honor, but I never- theless talked about half an hour on each subject.” “Was the proposed ship railway across the isthmus criticised adverse- ly by the English engineers?”’ ““On the contrary, it was approved. T did not meet one” man who thought the scheme was visionary,” “Did you goto England to seek foreign capital!” Not at all. My purpose was to study the mode of taking ships out of water at Liverpool.” “Did you receive any offers of fi- nancial assistance?”’ “Three very prominent men came to me and said that they would guar- an'ee that, if the shares were offered to the English public, all the money necessary would be subscribed within 1 told them that T could not enter into any negotiations because I had made a proposition to the United States government, and that until the matter was definitely decided T was not at liberly to do anything toward securing foreign capital. I refused their overtures for another reason, and that was because I did not want a monopoly created.” “In what condi at present?” “The Me; on is that scheme an government has made large ccncessions, that has done everything toward furthering the plan that has been required. During the summer the government has relieved me of considerable expense by send- ing out some of its most prominent surveyors, who ,made considerable progress in the preliminary surveys; s0 that all we waiting for now is the decision’ of our congress on my proposition.” “What are the terms you offered?” “In brief, that our government should guarantee two-thirds of the in- terest money at 6 per cent, That is all. No bonus and no principal. For fostering the scheme in its infan- cy our government has the power to make rates, and to place the tariff for Menico and the United States low- er than for any other country. ““If;the bill ~ should pass how soon would you begin work?’ “Within three months,” “And how soon would the ship railway be completed?” **Within four years,"” ‘Do you feel encouraged as to your ted success!” The ship railway will be If our government refuses my offer, T shall go to England, either to ament or to private individ- ause 1 am thoroughly con- vinced that the idea is practical. It has reccived such approval from the most prominent engineers,” ““Were you present at opening of the Liverpool docks?” ““Yet; while in Liverpool T was the guest of the engsneer of the docks, They were opened by the prince and princess of Wales, both of whom spoke to me in the most feeling man- nor about the attempt on the life of the president, and said very earnestly that they hoped he would recover.” —_— Bucklin's Arnica Salve, The best salve inthe world for euts, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever sores, tetter, chapped hands, chillblains, corns and all kinds of skin eruptions, This salve is guar- anteed to give perfect satisfaction in very case or money refunded. Price, per box. For sale by Tsn & McMang » Omaha, DISEASES ~OF THE— EYE & EAR DR.L. B. GRADDY, Oculist and Aurist, LATE CLINICAL ABSISTANT IN ROYAL LONDON OPHTHALMIC HOBPITAL. one that is not on the Canadian bor- der, is illuminated clear across, Wa- References all oputable Physicians of Omaha 447 Office, Corner 16th and Farnham Bts., Omaha, Nob suzbmetd It locat rroguiar Pain isn blossing. Whenover the BOwels becom Tarrant's Seltzer Aperient, danger. burd 1t will save much pain au Natur wometi 1 o« 14 80 outeaged by is A e to carry, through the heedlessnos chil iven, that she openly rlcls, and y fenrfully, Don't neglect the proper treatment Wwhen the symptoma first apacar, Resort (o th aperient, and wet well speed SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS daily eod, Juide | CAGO, and the EAsrris, Nowtn-Eastres, Sovri For You, ‘ Madam, Whoso complexion betrays gome humilinting impertfec. tion, whose mirror tells ?‘ou that yon are Tauned, Sallow and disfigured in countenance, | or have Kruptions, Redness, | Roughness or unwholesomo | tints of complexion, wo say use Hagan’s Maguolia Baln. Itisadelicate, harmless and | delightful articie, producing the most natural and entranc- ing tints, the artificiality of which no observer can detect, and which soon becomes pers manent if the M Is judiciously w cnolia Balm 1f sou are a man' of husiness, weak ‘ened by the strain of your 'duties ~ avold Fimulantsand use Hop e 1¢ you ars youn, tore brain ] waste, use Hop et Mnroe Lomecn it Alscretion Or dissipa g tion . 0 ¢ AT ried or single, or OungE, o Ilg"‘l“;fll pooF Bealth o boorbel on o Bitte Whoever you : ? ‘uyet Ay Cleansiniz, tons or. stimulating, Fitngut oxicuting, take Hop Bittors. Have you dys- plaine, discaso Bl etomach, Boreels, bloodil iiver oF nerves You will bol cured if you use| Hop Bitters Bl i rug. T ATe i, Bona for Circular. HoP BITTRRS nEC 0, Rocheater, N, Y. & Toronto, Ont. AGENTS WANTED FOR FASTEST SRLLING BOOKS OF Tiik AoR ! Foundationsof Success BUSINESS AND SOCIAL FORMS, The laws of trade, legal forms, how to tran act business, valuable tables, social etiquette parlinmonta¥y usagge, how o conduct public busi- Dess; in fact {t is & completo Guide to Sticcesa for all casos. A family necessity. Address for c culars and special torms ANCHOR PUBLISHIN St.Louig, Mo, g A No Changing Cars‘ OMAHA & CHICACO, Where direct connections are made with Through LEEPING CAR LINES for NEW YGRK, BOSTON, PHILADELPHIA, BALTIMORE, WASHINGTONY AND ALL EASTERN [ITIES, The Short Line via. Peoria Eor INDIANAPOLIS, CINCINNATI, LOUIS. VILLE, and all points in the SOUTE-ELAST. THE BRST LINN For ST. LOUIS, Where diroct_connections are made in tho Unfon Depot with the Throu Lines for ALL BOU'TIEX. NEW LINE o= DES MOINES THE FAVORITE ROUTE FOR Rock Island. The uneqvaled inducements offered by this line to travelets and tourists are as follows: The celebrated PULLMAN (16-wheel) PALACE SLEEPING CARS run_only on thisline " C., B, Q. PALACE MRAWING ROOM CARS, with Horton's Reclining Chairs, No extra charge for scats in Reclining Chairs. The famous C., B. Palace Dining Cars. . Gorgoous Bmoking Cars | 6 | | HAWKEYE PLAINING MILL GO., i Wost for boing the most direct, quiokest, and fimt Euuk‘hlhd. afost line connecting t croat Motropolis, Cill anl SOUTH-EASTRRS LINES, which torminate ther, with KANSAR CITY, | LRAVENWORTH, _Atciiisoy, COUNCiL, BLUFPS Ad OMALIA, the COMMRKRCIAU CRxTRRS from which radiate EVERY LINE OF ROAD that penotrates tho ¢ nt from the River to the Paciflc Slope CHICAGO Missourl ROCK ISLAND & PA. ¢ RATLWAY | yeroxs ! No huddling in i1l cloan CATS, 09 OVERy passongor Is | arried in roomy, cleen tod ventliated coaches upon Fast Express Trains Dav CAks of untivaled oy PALACK SLRY DixixG Cats, mificence, PULIVAY | 1 Cars, and oiF own world. 1 vhich meals aro serv at the low tate of SEVEST nact, with amplo time for healthful surpassed exeellonce ¥ W Through Cars b < and Misson nections st all point We ticket (do not forget this) dire laco of fuportance in Kanss, Ne ills, Wy , Utah, Idaho, No Orogon, on Torritory, Colo and New Moxico, A liberal arrangements rogarding bagens any other line, and ratos of farc alvos +l cw s | ompetiore, Who furnish Ut & Ut of ta com ort. Dogsand tackle o partawoen ree ta, maps and foldors at all principal officos in the United States and Oanada, R. R. CABLE, E. 8T, JOIIN, Vico Prest & Gen. Gen. Tkt and Pass'e Af Manager, Chicago Chicavo, 1880. SHORT LINE. 1880. KANSAS CITY, St.Joe& Council Bluffs RATILROAID 18 THR ONLY | Direct Line to ST. LOUIS AND THE EAST From Omaha and the West. No change of cars botween Omaha and ne. wouls, and but one between OMAIA snd Peorin, Mil | with other Iy to every n, Black alitornia, , Arizona NEW YORK, 4 SXEC 4 | Daily PassengerTrains | RRACHING ALL | EASTERN AND WESTERN | CHARGES and IN AD OTHER LIN This entire line is cquppod with Pullman’s Palace Sleeping Care, Palace Day Conches, Miller's Satcty Platlorty and_ Couplor, and tho celebrated Westinghouse Air-brake. £27See that your ticket rends VIA nANSAS CITY, ST, JOSEPH & COUNCIL BLUFFS Rail- road, via St. Joseph and 5t. Louis. | Ticketa for salo at all coupon statlons In the Wost. J. F. BARNARD, A'C.DAWES, = Gon, Supt., St. Josoph, Mot Gen. Pass. and Ticket Agt, Kt Joseph, Mo i ¥, Ti OMAHA,NE Sioux City & Pacific St. Paul & Sioux City RAILROADS, THE OLO RELIABLE SIOUX CITY ROUTE 2.€> > MILES SHORTER ROUTE 13O RO COUNCIL BLUFFS8 TO T. PAUL, MINNEAPOLIS DULUTH OR BISMARCK, andall points tn Northern Towa, Minnesota and Dakota. This line is equipped with the improved Westinghouse Automatic Air-brake snd - Millor Platform Couvlea and Buffor: and for SPEED, SAFETY AND COMFORT Koom B Is w passed. Elegant Drawin, Slooping Cars, owned and controller pany, run through WITHOU G njof Pacifl Transtor wcpat. at Cou St. Paul. iis leave Union Pacific Transtor dopot a Council Blutfs ut 6:15 m,, reaching Sioux City at10:20 .. m, and 8t. ul at 11:00 o, m. making TEN HOURS IN ADVANCE OF ANY{OTHER ROUTE Returning, leave St. Paul at 8:20 p. m., zeriving 1 Eioux City 4:46 8. m., and Union Pacific Trang { ) depot, Council Bluifs, at 9:00 a. 1. Be at your tickets &P IR, , Superintenden T. E. ROBINEON, ‘Missouri Valley, Asst. Gy Pass, Agent, J. H, O'BRY AN, Pase: il Des Moines, lowa. Manufacturers of 8ABH, DOORS, BLINDS, BRACKETS, MOULDINGS, &C. Great reduction in Bank Counters, Plans fur nighed, and word farnished in all kinds of hard or soft'wood. Counters finished in ofl when de- sived, Bhelving of all kinds furnished and put into building ready for paint on short notice haiiics that can be , Newels and Balusters. an in this departy formerly with ) Munufactiring Tils , and has done some of the in the Northwest Orders by mail promptly Bealed proposals for the Construction of Sidewalks, Se signed until September 29, for the construction of sidewalks front adjoining the following deseribed pre wmiscs, to-wit: Lot. Dlock. Addition, Iemarks. 50 ¢ Kountze& Ruth'y 174 o 18 ot 17 aclison A . 200 7% 0 8 601t11 Ly 8601614 " 0 T “ Wi 186 % nsidoeFarney ’ iid Capitol nside Farnhain Algo all that patt of the cast side of 10th strect, hotween the noith side of Castellar and south lin tted with clogant -backed rattan revolving chairs, for the exclusive use of first-class passen: ers, ¥%Ekool Track and superlor equipment combined with their gaeat through car arrangement, makoe this, above all others, tho (ayorite route to the East, South and Boutheast, Try it, and you will find traveling a luxury lu. of & discomfort, Through tickets vio this celebrated line for sale st all offices in the United States and Canada, All information about rates of fare, Bleeping Car acconunodations, Time Tables, etc., will be cheerfully given by applying to PERCEVAL LOW General Passonyor Agont, T. J, POTTER, Genorsl Manaver Chicago GRAND OPENING! Professor Fisher, (trom B, Louis) Danciny ademy, Standard f1all, cor Fiftecnth and ham, Tucsday evening, September 6ih, Clagses for badiea and Gey Tuesday wvening Septe Minncs and Mastors, comu noon at 4 o'clock, ' Classes for Familios, will bo arranged o sult the honorablo patrons. Also ballet dancing can be taught. Torus liberal, and perfe! satisfaction to schol- ars guaranteed. Frivate insteuctions wil o giv- en attho Dancing Academy or at the vesidence ‘hicago. jencing om for sy aftor neing Satu Vlock one (1) in South Omaha sddition. Also all that part on the cast side of 10th stiect, between the south line of Charley atreest and north line of block oue (1) in South Omaha ad- dition. Jod. L € IR 8e22.0t PROBATE NOTICE. City Clerk, State of Novraska, Douglas County ss: a County Court, held at the County i and for said County, Nept. 2ird, Proscnt, A, M. CHADWICK, Court o Ryan, of Augustus o may bea low d to adopt sald Jo , and the potition and atatene L of Henry wnd S Rywy. percnts of said child that said Augustus and Dell Carcy jitted 80 to do and voluntarily relin: claim to said child hat October 22nd, A, D. 1881, at gnod for hearing said peti- Al parsons intorested in said matto pear ab & County Court to bo held, in ang for wid Counity, aud Wow catse why the peayoer CHICAGO Ao the on this rond Junetion point ek AN o o™ \§ Over Urans. nealy sioux City, No [ FING .,.\- S , Fkoopor ety over this roxd ey rond for yon The Pr to fake when (5 NITW AND CORRECT MAP any e nAbIe question that, the & NORTH-WESTERN nicago and all of the Principal Points in the West, North and Northwest arotaliy examine this Map, ravelly eipnl Citles of the West and Nor A\ Oy, VAN ESE Tts turongh fraing make close connections with the fras the s \ v!rmm.:l ‘S Spaldi Quinnosco 8 Ay Toad Wost of Chica The Imperial Palace 11 the onty road that runs Pullman Sleeping Cars North or Northw Q00 MILLES O ROAD, 1t torms the following Trunk Couaeil Blufrs, Denver & California Line, l Nebraska& Yankton L t & Dubuque Line uro sold by all € Milw Coupon | uses Winona, Mirmesof 3 St ke, G g ot S e OHICAGO & NORTH-WESTERN _RAILW THE CHICAGO & NORTH-WESTERN RAILWA Inelpal 1 ta & Cen! Land Minne en Bay & Lake Superiol ckét Agents fn the United States wid wol AY, v o3, runs eneh way daily from two to fouror more Fast (xprase "Dining Cars. st of Chicago. 1ibas. polis Line, \ enember to ask for Tickets via this road, be sure they read over It,and take none other. MARYIN UUGIITT, Gen't Manager, Chicago. .« W. 1, STENNETT, Gen'l Pass. Agent, Chicago. HARRY P. DUEL, Tickot Agent,C. & N, W. Railway, 14th and Fanham stroets, D tailway, 14th and Farnham streete . E. KIMBALL, Assistant J. BELL, Ticket Agent C. &N, W. i SAMES T. CLARK Genoral Azent. ioket Apunt C. & N, W ilway, U, P. R. R. Depot. EFALIL Announcement! A large and varled stock of Sta- ple and Fancy DRY GOODS AT FIMEEN PER CENT LOWEHER THAN DOWN TOWN STORES. You will Save MONEY by buying iyour DRY GOODS of GUILD & McINNIS 0603 N. 16th Street, 2d door north of Cal orn E Side. WM. ROGERS Manufacturing Company, MAKERS OF THE. Finest Siver Plated Spoons and Forks. The on a Rival of petitioner should not e grauted, and that o e o penoncy of wakd potition and the hesving thercof, b givén to all porsons intorexted in s matter, by publishing & copy of this orderin Tix ONAIlA WrEKLY BEE, & newspaper printed in sald of the patrons, Private ordors may be left atMo» Meyer & Bro's, » G804 County, for three successive wewks, Llrlnr to sald day of hearing 'A. M, CHADWICK, sezawit Taunty Judke OMAHA, Forks Knives of care, especial only and Rogers Bros, All our Spoons, and plated with the greatest Each lot being hung cale while being plated, to insure a full de- posit of silver on them, We would call atten- tion to our sec- Orient All Orders Ip tho West should be Addressed to OUR AGENCY, A. B. HUBERMANN, Wholesale tional pla is giving stance a plate on the scc making a a triple one, Jewel te that for in- single plated Spoon a triplethicknessof ly on tio s where expo d to wear, thereby single plated Spoon wear as long as plated er, NEB. 1R M1 L) | § Dakata Lina

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