Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 26, 1882, Page 4

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B S ———— e The Omaha Bee Published every mnmlng,noept Sunda) 9he only Monday morning daily, TEKMS BY MAIL:— One Year.....210.00 | Three Months. 'h‘ m Bix Months, 5,00 | One . IHE WEEKLY BEE, published ev- TERMS POST PATD:— NO HALF WAY MEASURES Omaha wants no half way measures for paving her streets, Allarguments which oppose liberal bonding of the city for paving purposes are short sighted and unworthy of the consider- ation of our citizens, Every merchant in Omaha knows that our principal streets must be in the near fu- ture if the city hopes to maintain her present lead among the commercial paved ¢ 50 L One Near..+ 8200 | TnreeMonthe. . 38| cities of the west. The proposition m— advanced in the last meeting of the CORRESPUNDENCE—A(l Communis | board of trade that no greater s relating to News and Editorial mat- yuld be addressed to the Enrtor or E, E B¥ T“i!lr'.*L o TERS—All Business Detters and Remittances should be ad dressed to THE OmAna PrauisniNg (o PANY, OMAHA, Drafts, Checks and Post- office Orders to be made pays able to the order of the Company. OMAA PUBLISHING (0., Prop’rs E: ROSEWATER, Edito Ty Farmers Alliance opened yes- terday at Hastings with a large at- tendance and in an excellent spirit of practical work. — Turrty degrees below zero was re corded on the Hudson yesterday, and the ice harvesters' hallelujah is being foudly sung for forty miles along the Tiver, e— Biut Cuaspren still pines for the navy department. It is becoming more eyident every day that the navy department does not long for a new incumbent. CovaressMas FArweLL has joined the advocates of free ships. John Roach and his lobby are on hand to block any moves in this direction and may be expected to have their usual success. THoSE state papers who have already ‘begun making nominations for the state ticket next fall are entirely too previous. There will be a good many slips between the official cup and the chronic candidates’ lips between this and next November. Wirn Bookwalter accusing the Ohio democratic committee of swindling him in the last campaign, a deadlock in the New York democratic legisla- ture and general hair pulling in the party throughout the south, the out- look for “‘the party of the constitu- tion” is not very brilliant. Tue report that Secretary Folger would shortly retire from the cabinet to take the place on the supreme bench vacated by Justice Hunt, is de- nied on his own authority, as 18 also the accompanying rumor that Mr. Conkling would, in that event, be made secretary of the treasury. Just at present Washington seems to be a good place for rumors, and a fBor place for appointments. THE great trial is over, and nothing but the sentence of Judge Cox inte- poses between Chas. J. Guiteau and the gallows. After an absence from the court room barely sufficient to poll their vote, the jury have returned a verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree, and the cowardly assas- sin of President Garfield will pay the penalty of his infamous crime. The country will experience a sense of re- lief that the horrible comedy, which has been for ten woeks played in Judge Cox’s court, has been brought to a close, and all will rejoice that no such signal miscarriage of justice as would have resulted from a disagree- ment or acquittal of the prisoner has stained the reputation of the Ameri- can people, or made its exccution of the laws the laughing stock of other nations. Tue active discussion in congress over the rights of the government and alleged lapsed land grants will be to some purpose if it opens the eyes of the people of the United States to the reckless manner in which it has been squandering the public domain. Bome of the grants ought certainly to have been annulled long ago. The Union Pacific lapsed grant has been maintained by a shrewd piece of legal trickery which we believe has never yet been fully tested before the supreme court in a fair and square presentation of the merits of the case. That of the Northern Pacific bids tair to be again resumed by the government, although & number of congressmen who are particularly anxious for its cancella- tion are not above the suspicion of acting in the interests of rival roads. If the government declares the unsold Northern Pacific lands forfeited un- der the charter some forty-seven mil- lions of acres of land will be resumed by the act. The original plan of the projectors of the road was to build amount of bonds than £100,000 should be permitted to be issued in avy one year would be very cconomy Any legislation that may be required during the present winter will have poor in view not the paving of one or two but the of a complete system of pta, of our principal str in- augurating paving within the next four years for the gre city. Whatever the amount upon abutting lots a sum must be raised by bonds, the intorest of which will be paid by the entire city. of ter portion our asgessed o portion of the Tt will be a poor cconomy under prosent conditions to limit the amount of these bonds to any such figure as n present financial condition with a rapid in- crease of population and taxable pro- perty the bonds of the city of Omaha would prove a very desirable invest- ment. Interest has not been so low for years as it is now. The extensive rofunding operations of the gove ment have set afloat immense sums of money which are looking for profita- ble investment. There is httle doubt that Omaha paving bonds, carrying five por cont. interest, could be readily placed during the coming year. limit the amount of money to b expen- ded to $100,000. This sum will hardly be suflicient to pave durably the busi- ness portion of our city comprised by three of our principal streets. Tnor- der to carry bonds paving must be more or leas general. Lot owners in portions of the city outside of the business section will the one proposed, her If we sver vote bonds unless thero is a reasonable cortainty that their own property will be sub- stantially improved within a very short period, and our citizens gencrally who have suffered and groaned for yoars over tho horrible condition of our streets will never advocate a plan which will not give some certain prospect of immediato and general re- lief. Tt must not b forgotten that issu- ing bonds for public improvements and as donations for corporations are very different matters. In the first place we are donating to ourselves, in the other to schemes from which we get only an indirect advantago, and often no advantage at all. Omaha can make no more profitable investment than a liberal expenditure for reclaim- ing her streets. Millions of dollars in capital have been turned away from this city by the dreadful condi- tion of our thoroughfares, while our dust and mud are by words in every part of the country, With clean and substantially paved streets our busi- ness facilities will at once bo increased 80 that our present commercial houses can increase their transactions at less while foreign capital, in- spired by confidence in our future, will be induced to locate midst, expense, m our REVACCINATION. The only safety in times of small pox epidemic is speedy vaccination, Thore seems to be no certainty as to the time in which the virus of a former vaccination runs out of the system. This seems to depond upon two influ- ences, that of the individual system and the amount of virus introduced at the Cases are known where a single vaccination has lasted for life and others where vac- cination has been successful at an in- terval of only a year, In a paper on vaccination and revaccination, read rocontly by Dr. William B. Davis be fore the Cincinuati Medical Society, he said: “We may very pertinently agk ourselves the question, ‘Do the American physicians, as a rule, intro- duce suflicient vaceine virus into the arms of their patients to fully infect their systems” T have the records of 272 cases of rovaccinations recently mado by myself, wherein T carefully noted the number and condition of the cicatrices of the primary vaccina- tions, Upon an examination of these records I find that seventy per cont. of them had but one cicatrix, and that fully thirty-three per cent. of them had very poor cicatrices. dred and twenty were students Medical college Cincinnati, and were from Pennsylvania, Kentucky, Ohio, Indiana and Tllinois. previous operation, One hun- of the number of the Miami of the line by means of money se- |cinnati. Seventy-five por cent, of oured by bonds, to pay for|these re accinations were successful, these bonds by the sale of a|and nearly fifty por cent, took with all part of thelands, and to come into possession of a railroad and over a hundred million dollars’ worth of lands which had cost them a quarter million of dollare or thereabouts. The panic of 73 knocked this little scheme in the head and prevented all of the projectors from becoming mil- lionaires. It now looks as if their failure to complete the road within specified time will result in the can- cellation of the land grant by the government. the constitutional disturbances - some oven greater- of a primary vaccina- tion, thereby indicating that the pri- mary vaceination had not been sufli- cient to thoroughly infect them, and protect them from small pox had they been exposed to it, My ubum\ullunl a# a practitioner of medicine for full twenty-five years confirm the truth of the above record, and force mo to the conclusion that our American physicians, as a rule, do not introduce sufficient vaccine virus into the arms K . s high time The remainder were residents of Cin- | IHE OUMAHA DAILY BEE: THURSDAY JANUARY 251882, of their patients. They make but one insertion usually; and whi to insertion enough togive completeinfection, nev erthelossfully fifty percent. of their vac cinationsaresoinsuflicientastogivebut it is pos sible make one large This is an astound if true, arouse the profession andlead them to little protection, ing statement, and, should revaccinate their that vaccination has been performed infancy it should be r after the establish rons at once. after rule has been ment of puberty, say from twelve to sixteen years of age, and again about middle life A good rule will be for every person to be revaccinated soon after they | womanhood ve grown intomanhood or and then at least once during the prevalence of demic to which they may be All that Jenner claimed every opi- exposed for vaccina tion was that whenit was ‘duly and efticiently porformed it willjprotect the constitution from the subsequent at of small smnll pox attacks a person who lias 1t that one-per cent. of those who have had will have recurrent small pox. Vaceination will do more than an attack of small pox will in proteeting one belonging to this sus- ecptible class. One of the students whom T vaccinated pitted from attack of small pox. The-vace nation took as woll as a primary one in his case, Thero quite as rare as the former, whoare had it a second time. in estimated the disease was well is another class, for the time being quite unsusceptiblo to the vaccine virue, and presumably to the small pox. class is that they never know when the conditions upon which their un suscoptibility depends may change, and they becomo susceptible to the vaceine or variolus influence. Among the students whom T recently vaccina- ted wasone who said: The danger to this ‘T have been vac- and it has never Another one said ;T been vaccinated a dozen times with- out any eflect,’ and a third one said, ‘T have been vaccinated twenty times without any threo gentlemen had very sore arms on the eighth and ninth days after I inserted the virus into them. cinated ten times taken.’ have result.” These There one student, however, who had been re- ated without peatedly vac BUCCESS, whose systom has now twice refused my most careful attempts to success- fully vaccinate him. His exemption in the future from small pox will largely depend upon his being vac- cinated at least once during the pres- once of every pidemic of small to which he may bo exposed.” This interesting statement is of the highest importance to our citizens at the present time. While but few inolated cases of small pot have as yet appeared in Omahs, and every precaution is being taken by tho board of health to prevent fur- ther infection, nothing but universal vaccination on the part of our citizens can furnish a certain bulwark against the spread of the disease. It is re- ported that a large number of yacei- nations have not taken, Under these circumstances the operation should be performed a second time, and as- surance be given that a suflicient amount of the virus has been intro- duced. vaccine point or auill should be used, and the virus thoroughly applied on the abraided surface of the skin, which should af- torwards be permitted to dry. If the speration thus porformed is not suc- cessful the patient may consider him- self small pox proof pox A whole NO DOG IN THE MANGER POLICY. Omaha wants no artificial wall of railroad tracks blocking her streots, and preventing other roads from bid- ding for her trade. No city has dealt more liberally with railroads in the matter of donations alleys, not to speak bonds, than Omaha, has repeatedly asked for extraordinary privileges the city council, and has generally re- coived all that it asked for, But it's present domand for permission to block up Jones street is unr.asor. ablo, and should be emphatically ro of streets of lands and The Union and Pacific from fused. No impartial person who has scanned the map pub- lished in Tur Be doubts for & moment that (he chiaf object of that corporation is to block up access to the new depot grounds of the I3, & M. company The people of Omaha have no concern in the peivate quar- rels of railroad corporations. But when those quarrels threaten to seri- { ously affoot our commercial interests that our city council should refuse to lend a helpiy hand in injuring Before many | months Omaha will by connectod by a new through route with Denver, whose Missouri river terminus will practically be in this city. And at the very outset she is asked by a rival corporation which has boen loaded down with gifts and benefactions by our city to assist in excluding a com- peting linefrom obtaining neoded facil itios for doing business with our mer- chants. It remains to be seen whoth er the city council will assist in play- ing & game which must prove highly injurious to every merchant and ship- per in Omaha, Tho Union Pacific the ciiy tacks pox as much as that disease itself will. | I never expected it would do more; and it will not, T believe, do less.’ Ttis known that occasionally has had every opportunity afforded it for laying side tracks and switches our streets for transacting its own business and Omaha will not now per mit it to another of ite thoroughfares simply to prevent the B. & M. from securing an easier inlet and outlet for their t ——— The Living for the week ending January 21, has the monopo'ize affic in our city Tur number of following noteworthy table of con tents: “A Page ot Diplomatic His tory,” by C. Blennerhassott, Fort nightly Review; “The Freres,” by Mrs Alexander, author of ‘Th Wooing O't,” ete., Temple Bar “Dean Stanlcy as a Sprritual Teach Nineteenth Cen Shetland,” by Jour or and Theologian,” tury; “Yulo an Old Shetlanc Time in r, Chambers Adventures ot respondent,” Blackwe “Robin,” by Mrs, *Adam and Eve,” “A Gracious Ploughing ; ““The Constituents of ‘Pleas antness, and Jad Handwriting and Stupid Readers,” Spectator; the usual amount of select poetry. a War Cor Magazine; nal; od's Y Parr, Tey ete., and I1 1] becoming & serious ques'ion a numbor of cities whether n ving material after all tate Fifteen thor to run Cheyenne o O'Neill citizens h on the 24th to organi; tion, The town of Shelton shi; pe-l over 300, 000 hushels of wheat since the lst of Jan- uary, ‘I'he lumber dealers of Ord are preparing f.r the summer boom by laying in huge wupylies. The railrond .-mu-u entin Cedar 2oty is intensi U. P. and B, & M. surveyors are in the field, Bob Obscerfelder, through the ice off T week, and narrowly angler s luck, A Frement fool vainly attempted to jerk himself into eternity last we Herald advises to go west and gre as a road agent, E. 8. Harter, of Ord, was forced to sus. d by an unfavorable rport of ¢ Liabititic. $1,00 w will be requited o present year d aronsing meeting i creaniery assoct broke y last An of Sidney. odge Pole ¢ caped drowning. P mercial agen 00 to 37,000, ederer, i captured near nmu..w, together pal named D'Arey. Both have Cdiinthie GFand Tand ii A typographcal ercor on hi Denver soaked several articles belo to a Sidney man, and notified the own that he would refund after the firstih The favmers of Valley county ready beginning to pl n the next son’ wpaign, Less wheat will e s wn than last year, and more corn planted. Flax are will have'an increased acre ge. W. V. Smith, of Syracuso, who dis posed of mortgiged property there some time ago and disappeared, was in Kansas and brought bick. The Omaha Republi ting con- siderable advertising of o very inferi quality from several publ s'ers in the state who publish prospectus and failed t 1 get their pay,—Custer Leader. Tho hopefuls of Lincoln were piralyzed Tuesday by the sudden apiearance there of the offi ials of the Mi souri P..cific, U P.'und B. & M., each in special trains. Their busin ss was not definitely known rty-five thousand dollars have been paid into the Omaha school fund for li. quor lic nses inu_ry Uth, —[Grand sland Independent. Voi'ie 0fF abiit captured 233,000 Saloon keeper. id fo-| two months of the ye'r, % : Among the many A nual Rev save birth, th rise and enr The Pawnee City Ente County Standard take high, The former contained o comprehensive review of the progress of poth Pawnee City and county, octified with an arcay of figures whi must have taken many weeks’ . lect and prepare tor the printer. cont addition to the railroad facil the county and particularly the placed both «n an equal footing with their nviul) Possensed now of these long- delayed facilitios, with fa mn lands unsur- passed in produetiveness, and with & press whose “*I'nterprize’* leads in the maich nf progress, the presnt and future pi ty of both city and county and secure, ly*\.llm County & aside from its elaborate record of the past year, illustrated several of the prominent public buildings and business houses o Crete, which convey more to the mind an instant than whole pages of desc tion reading, Crete is one of th nn|nnl ant and prosperous towns of the state, and The Standard is the brightest beacon in its patr THE BEE ANNUAL. ricultural students and school; that the many Y es con 1 and in cvery .| detrimental to the universit g school Lewellyn is still of the opinion that any effort to remove the Mescaleros from their present res ervation will result in a fight. Hesays that the Tndians are willing to give up the northern strip of the reserva tion, but that is all they will concede. These of the tribe that have been off into the sout srtion_ of Lincoln county, marauding around the settle ment of Seven Rivers, re‘urning by twos and threes, and will all soon be in. How long they will remain it is impossible to say, but it is not prob. Wble that they will refrain from in fulging their nefarious practices for eat length of time. Mr. Lew ellyn will talk this matter over with authorities at Wasghington, when some conclusion will probably be | reached as to what disposition tomake of the order for the removal of the Mescaleros, which order is now tem [ porarily suspended. The people in | the vicinity of the agency pronounce | Mr. Lewellyn a good agent, and thus [ erdorsed, what hie says in Washington | wiil probably carry weight with it, and dec the matter, Itis a ques ion in regard to which a la num- ber of good citizens of the Territory re deeply concerned, and develop- ments will be watched with the ut- most jntercst, THE UNIVERSITY. First Day's Meeting of the Board or Regents. | The Usual Clashing Between Chancel- lor ana Faculty. C_rrespondencs of The B, Lixcory, Neb., January 25, - The board of regents of the Nebraska state university ecnvened here Tues- day afternaon at three o’clock, Board called to order by President Holmes, with Messrs. eld, Persinger, Car- son ana Powers. Regent Garnet ab- sent on account of sickness. The re- port of Chancellor Fairfield was presented and read. Among the many subjects treated was that of the umting the two faculties, the agricultural and that of science and art, as is generally the custom with all prominent colleges, and proving beneficial in the highest de- gree. He also claimed th the senate of the universit com- posed of the two faculties re- commended a return to the Id systom studi C wse and of 1ho thrce terms in | present system of 1wo semeste it fhie old system was bot the Latin scl 1rtmes ol de meial rej chancellor dental | © that 812 for the remainder | in i thought Ho .-\[Hw.\. of the year as incidentals, €100 for assistance to junitor and $3% for post and advertisi A petition was received from Profs. Howard, Ewmerson, Wond- berry and Church in favor of the elec- tive, and earnestly recommending its adoption, and that no charge be mado until a fair trial is given, They RodE:Nachit mly way to successfully pu A continuous stdy, that '|n- was saved both and the organization of classes examinationg, The follo was presenfed sigred by every stu dent in the co'looe dopartinont, with Lwo exceptions ted during the past semester in this university has been most benefi- cial to the students by broad- ening their coll course, in- areasing their mental discipline and economizing their time, we, the un- dersigned students, herchy express our entire satisfaction with that sys tem and division of the year, begging only that the number of required studies be lessened. Prof. Howard presented a petition, asking that the Latin scheol students be hereafter known as the 1st and 2d sub-freshmen and be under the charge of an acsdemic fessor, Prof- Thompson of the Agricultural farm, made his report, in which he showed the amount of bad luck that depart- ment has met with during the past year, in the way of failure of crops, loss of stcek, etc. Secretary Dales presented his re- port which was referred to a finance R committee. The following commit- Perfectly Immense, tees were appointed: Ulysses Dispatch: Tue Oxana| Exccutive—C. A. Holmes, J. W. Beg’s Tllustrated Annual Review is | Gannett, L. B. Fifield. perfeetly immense, and is character-| Finance—.J. W. Gannett, J. L. Car- 1stic of the enterprise of the best daily | son, N. R. Persinger. paper in the west. University and Library—N. R, - Persinger, J. L. Carson, 1. Powers. Creditable to Omaha. Course of Study--L. B. Fifield, Rising City Independent: Withits [ J. W, Gannett, I. Powers, usual enterprise Tie Bee sends out| Board adjourned until Wednesday its Lllustrated Annual Review of the | morning, D. S. WHEELER, JR. business and business houses of Omaha, It is creditable to Omaha RAILROAD NEWS, that 8o good a paper is annually sent out a8 an advertisement to that grow- ing city. ‘A Marvelous Beauty.” Alexandrin News: Tur Omaua Ber’s Aunual Review this year is a arvelous beauty and eclipses any- thing of the kind we have ever seen “Hard Work" 18 too Mild, Columbus Journal Tne Omana Bee's illustrated sup- ploment this year shows hard labor to produce such a neat and praiseworthy production. We hope the editor will in due timo receive his coward from somewhere, “Superior to All" uce Enterprise Uy OmanA Bk is out, as is 1ts custom, with a magnificent illustrated review of Omaha and its business. the Nebraska dailies, Thr Bee ferior to none, Lowellyn's Pots. New Mexico Moruing News, Mr, Wm H. Lowellyn, agent of the Mescalero Apache Tndians, ar- rvived here Sunday morning and is stopping at the Palace hotel. Heis en route to Washington to which city he will take six Muumlnro and -four Pueblo Indian children, and perha) one from among the Zunis, whom will place at the Argyle Indian tra Of | I Gould has taken possession of the Union Depot at St. Louis. The Santa Fe company are laying steel rails on the main line, The snow blockades of last summer cost the Towa roads $:00,211.6 ", Leav nworth is anxious to secure con. ne tion with the Burlington. .. There are 2,100 wiles of steel rail and 275 miles of iron ruil in Tova, Five hundred 'ocomotives were manu- factured at Patterson, N, J., last year, The roads centering at Indianapolis have decided to build a new union depot. Italians in large number are heing ship- ped to Arizona by railroad construction companies, The state of Massachusetts has invested over $20,00 1,000 in the Hoosac tunnel, and £3,607,(00 in the Boston, Hartford & Erie ratlroad. The Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe is erating eight ‘‘while” locomotives in e e, Mhioy e itk tive tons each, "The combined length of all the railroads of the United States is over one hundred thousand miles, or sufficient to reach four times around the globe, TPhe progress of the Mexican Central railroad of late hus been marked and rapid, The line now extends to the 38th mile in the midst of sand hills known as the *Los Medanos, The Black can on the Salt Lake route of the Rio Gr nde, is said to be the most imposing and wierd strip of soenery in the entire Rocky mountain system, or, for that matter, ou the continent. Al the Pacific railroads, including the and | 1¢ vetition | Union Pac Central Pacific, Southern Pacific and Texas Pacific, are said to te moving in the direction o' a general pool. ing arrangement of California traffic, The t of the |hiladelphin & cading vailroad and Coal & Trom com panies for December, which begins the fiscal year, shows that the profit llmh companies tor the month was 89375 nuu | of 085, comp red with |n-.w ber, 1850. Protty Good . Bacon, Laporte, Ind., writes ar ‘Serisg Pressom' is all von erack ed it up to be. My dyspepsia hus ul_van. ished; why don't you adveitise it? What allowance will yon make_if I take a dozen bottles, soithat T could obl occasionally?” Price 5 tles 10 cent I'ts Grea: English Remedy Nover fails to cure ervous Debility, Vi | I Exhaustion, Emis dons, Seminal Weak [ et LOST MAN- A AWRIHOOD, and all the 1 i AT crfccts of youth tollies and exces. o8, 1t stops perma ently all weakeni ary loss s 18 upon the sys \ e b ultof these evil pra 0 destrie’ ive to mind and body insuni Chves, lrain, and Repro. Digustive meniory( Blood, Mus les, ictive Ors ns,” Tt rest-res to all the oreani functiens their former vigor and vitality, ma life chocrful syable Price, $3 e, or four tines ity 210 Yo f tion, to any addres on receipt of vr 10, I, sent, covipt of St ara tee. Letters re- ting iclose stamp. ADr. Min'ie's Dandelion Pills t and cheapest dysocpsia and bi 0 the mark t. Sold by all drugiists nawers st 18 Price Dic MiSTIES KIDNEY REMEDY, GRYRETICUM, Cures all kind of Kidney and bladder complainte, o rorrhen, glect & d leucorreca, For enle v all dauey sts: <1 a hottle ENGLISH MEDIC ITUTE, 718 Olive 1ouis, Mo, Jan2s-ly e BOYD'S OPERA HOUSE ! JAMES E LOYD, Pro) R L. MAKSH ® Manager. Two Nights Only and Saturday Matinee. COMMENCING Friday, Jaanuary 27th ! GRAND TRIUMPH .mm ent Production of the Grand Reali:tic Spectacular Drama, THE WORLD ! EVERY SCENE ENCORED. The Departure, __ The Explosion, The Raft, _The Murder. The Escape. Sale of Seats commencer Wednesday mort ing January 25, at box otlic Tickcts 26c, Hle, 7 Watine: Prices, A 50¢, Ch Idren’ tu-hofi GUARDIAN'S SALE I the matter of the ctrdisnship of n Wymian ant Williow . Wynian, miror of tarriet F. Wy se Notice Is hereby lven shat_undor tueof an ord ¢ an license of the Dis witein and fo the hnd « chambers this doy, o hereinaftr deser bid to b - sold £ s mic e, the undersigned gnardian minors wil'y 0n the 16th day of Fehruary afterncon of Tonse of aid_county 1852, at 2 o'clock 11 th auction the followinis real in offe in said county of Doug as ard wa, and deseribed as follows, to vt half of sonthe to «nship 15, 11, cast, in righ ¥ of "expe and’ courtesy 1 as father and next of kin to or heirsa oresaid. ~ale to be open for hour, and the terms thereof to be 1 art cash and such'other terms and time a8 said guardian may agree upon at the iime cf sale, within the legal requirements in suc . case provided WYVMAN Guar ian. NOTICE, e co-partnership here ofore existing butwe % Hansen and L. F. Nelson ha- this day be olved by mu'ual conrent. L. F. Nilson continue the busine & and co'lect all bills due the fiza and pay all debts owned by the firm. ———— AT WM. GENTLEMAN'S. It Will Pay You to Call and Eee His Prices On NNED GOODS &V ETABLE! Also, Butter and Eggs, at BOTTOMPRICES jan16dim " NEBRASKA State Gazetteer and Busi- ness Directoy, Containing a deseription and a list of all business n enin the state, will be issued early in 18: Price $1,00. J. M. WOL¥F Geo. P. Bemis ReaL ESTATE Acency, 16th and Dodge 8ts,, Omaha, Neb This gency does sTRICTLY & brokersge bustness Dnss 0t pec ula he any bargaing onaks e Puhlichor Neb NOTICE. {Tenry H. Woolt will take notice that on the 22 day of December, 1881, the County Judie of Douglas County, Nebraskd, issued an order of attachment for the sum of 312600 in an action pending before him wherein Parker P, Clark, George H. Clark and Elijah F. Clark, partners ay Clark Fros. arc puintiffs, and erry H. Wooll defendant; that property beloi ging to you has been attached under said order; that sald cause d to the Fevruary, 1881, term of said court, and that you arc reqiired fo appear and answer by the 6th day of February, 1852, Dated Omaha, Jai uary 14, 18: « RK BROS. Janlicveats COUNSELOR - AT - LAW J. H. McOULLOCH, Roem 4, Creighton Block, Fifteenth Street. jan16-3m By CLARKSON & HUNT @40, W. DOANR, A, C. CAMPHNLL DOANE & CAMPBELL, Attorneys- at Law, Clarkson &. Hunt, Buccessors to Richards & Hunt, ATTORNEYS-AT- LAW 8. L4thStrast m ha Nob. J. L. WILKIE, MANUFACTURER OF PAPER BOXES. 218 and 220 8. 14th St, OM.AK? » NEBE. m W. J. CONNELL, ATTORNEY - AT - LAW, Orrion—Front Kooma (up stirs) 1o Hauscon: Drick_building, N. W, corer Fiea Taha st © o t one-fourti of | HOUSES Lots, FARMS, Lands. For Sale By BEMIS, [ *IFTEENTH AND DOUGLAS ST8,, pnnl ‘Aventie noa 57, Large lot or blc n, near Irene strect, § Full corner lot on , near 16th 000, § Two lota‘on Center street, near Cume £000, ) Lot onSpruce street, near 6th- streot, 1, Two lots on Seward, near King street, 13, Lot on Seward, near King street, 9, Half lot on Dodge, near 1ith street 247, Four beautiful residence lets, near cighton College (or will sell 8 parate), §8,000. No, 246, Two lots on Charles, near Cuming strect, $400 each. stree 3, Lot 66 by 133 feet on College stroet, St Mary's Avinue, » ,' near 26th street, 0 241, Lot on Faruham, near 26th s rect, 0. 240, Lot 60 by 99 fect on South Avenue, Maron strect, $650. 9, Corner Ict on Bur., near 22d atreet, foot on Harney, near 24th 2,400 500, 1, Lot 40240 foct, ‘héar C pitol Avenue S5 Decatur, niar Irene street 'p. near 13th d strect, near Clark, $6500. amiltor, near King, 5500, Two lots on 16'h, near Pacific street, Two lots on Castellar, near 10th street, 204, beantiful residence near Coming, $86 lot on Division N Lot on’ Saunders, near Hawilton strey 50. N i Lot 16th street, near Pacific, $500. No. 195] 'l'hn,u lots on Saunders street, near d, § 0. m.sl. lm. on 20th street, near Sherman 0. 1944, Two los on 92d, 2600 ¢ ch. No. 191}, two lots on King, near Hamilt street, &1,200. 0. 102}, two lotson 17th strect, near White 4 near Grace street R0, 1581, o Tl block, ten Tots, near the bar- racks, $100, 191, fot on Parker, near Irene stroot, 8300, 0. 1 two lots ou Cass, near 21st street, e ) 26,000, No. 181, lot'on Center, near Cuming street, $300. 0. 150, lot on Pier, near Seward street, 8650, 175, lot on Sherman avenue, near Izard L 1,400, lot on_Cass, near 14th, 81,000, lot on Pacific, near 14th strect; make No. 166, six lots on Farrham, ncar 24th street 81745 to 2,000 each, No. 16 " full block on 20th lots in G strects, lo* on Callfornia streef, near Creigh , 425, cre lot, near the head of St street, nea '8 addition Mary's ., 125, hout two acres, near the head of St. avenue, 81,00, lot on 1sth street, near White Lead 120137 ear Poppleton’s, 81,600, 110, thirty hall oli's additions aratoga strects, ar track, 880 to § . 89, lot on.Chica No. 55, lot on’ Caldwel 8300 No. 86, corner lov on Charles, 1ear Saunders . 2 Tots) on 18th street, lots in Millard and ran avenue, Spring ar the end of green Sauuders street lot on Tzard, ne st, with two sm 40 , two lots on 19th, near Pierce stree 8, three lots on Harney, near 19th street, fect on Oth strect, near Leaven. 0. , on Pacific, near Sth-street, 66x182 feet, on Douglas street, near 500, , cighteen lots on 21st, d and lers streets, near Grace and Saunters stree Dridge, $100 each, )th No. 6, one-fourth block (180x135 teet), nearuine Convunt of Poor Claire on Haw the end of red stree car track, 8s 5, 10w on Marcy, near 9th stiect, §1,200, Yot on Califcrnia, near 21st, #1,600. 1ot on Casw, near 22d stre 500, on strect, nre 1, lot «n Harney, near 15th, 82000, Lots In Harbach's firit and second additions also in Parker's, Shinn's, Melson’s, Terrace, E. V. Swiith's, Redick's, Gise's, Lake's, and all other additions, 4t a y prices and terms, 807 lote | Place, near Hauscom Parhgerices ‘o 5300 to 8800 cach, One hundred and fifty-mine beautiful res. dence lot, located on Hauilton street, half way between the turn table of the red strect car ling and the waterworks reservior and addition, and just west of the Convent of the Sisters Poor Claire in Shinn's adition. Prices 1ange. from #75 to $100 each, and will be sold on easy terms, Tracts of 6, 10, 16, 20, 40 or 80 *crow, with buildings and other ilprovements, and adjoining the city, at all prices. 8600 of the best residence lots In the city of Omaha- locati you de north, east, south or west, and at bed-rock prices. ' ice husiness A)--u in all the principal 0s8 atreots of Omaha, vary ing Lusinoas st arying from 300 to Two hundred houses and #5600 to 815,000, and located in city Large number of ex ots ranging from ry part of the llent farms 1 Douglas, Washington, Burt, and Nebraska, a, 7,000 acres large tracts in all the castern tiers of « Rea. Estare Acency 16th and D¢ agla Street, nas, O aaxEa

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