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THE IMPERIAL AC TATION The Royalists of France Vig:r- ously Working for Power anl Prestige, Ex-Bupre. s Hu.enie Suddenly Appsars t Beo:t Jer mo Vupoleon, THE DAILY BE-( will reach a decision this mornin Late Tues evening it was an nounesd that all ministers exceps D1 rosigned, is definitely overturned, the Foey cinet-Floquet ministry is spoken of, throwing their stocks ou the mar- ke', The want of a guiding universally felt military pronuociamento is freely . talked ~about throvghout Bur Ths Prep ol Txoulsion of clnescs, Thore is a rencting N the rezime of dollars ¢ 8, Privoss L ile to Precipi- aud a yearning for the eavio Yaea s OFNLA, Tt s certain tho chambors will adopt Flogueis progosal Gaubetta’s dosth R dical «nd Cinvrvativy Repub- Hoeans at Daggor's Pojute, G neral Variety of Fo elgn New:. FRANCE. Bpecial Dispatet s 1o Tuk Brn A BAD STATE OF AL Pakts, Jaunary 23 —Taers was a i uts ou the bourse yea'er eveats followiug the Princo Nupoleon's ifes'o, the restlessnees in the diputies, the un- certainty of the fato of the govern- ment, bills and vewspaper public mind has creatnd a Cdigquistade. Among the propert'es clasy vhe hold- ers of rents and other secarities have thrown them on tho market for foar that revolutionary measures may dw preciate them. Prosident Grevy seems to have been efficted by the re cent scare, MILITARY PRECAUTI. NS, Paris, January 23.—A guard has been stationed at the garden entrance «f the Elysees with muekets loaded with ball cartridges. A sabscription has been opened ‘o behaf of the fam- ilies of the condemned anarchists, A FAMOUS FRENCHMAN DEAD, Parig, January 23.-- Gastave Dore, the tamous painter, is dead, THE EX-EMPRESS IN PARIS, Parts, January 23 —Ex Eunpress Eugene announces she ignores the re public and comes to Paris to display her symoathy with Prince Jeromo. Her presency isa toplo almost as ex- cltiny as the arcest of the prince, It is eaid Eag ne was cognizant of the maunifesto. [Her adhersnts claim her presence means a demonatration 1n he- half of the name of the family of Na. poleon. This, it is observed, is con- sldered rather doubtfal, owlng to the well known c)olness between tha ex- empress and prince, THE RESULT OF THE ELECTIONS in the bureau (f the chamber of depu- ties for members of the committtee on bills dealing witn pretenders to the throne, is found in favor of the gov: ernment bills, with certaln restric- tions. Six are in favor of Floquet's bill, and one in favor of Baliue's. Eighty votes wera given for membars favoring the governmentbills, and 120 for those favoring the bills of Floquet. The ropori of a ministerial crisis is not contirmed. The ministers decided at a council to-day thatat to-morrow’s eltting of the committeeelected to-day they would explain their policy in re- gard to pretenders. THE DIFFERENCES IN THE CABINET have arisen from the disoussion of the third clauze in the government bill to place the Ocleans princes, now in active service, on the rotired list, It is understood that the minister of war refuses the adhesion, while it is affirmed that the other members of the cabinet favor Ballue's more strin- gont amendment decrecing immadiate cashioring of the princer. The lat- ter's harsh anactment is the stuwbling block over which tha ministry prom- ises to break up befure long, A DANG ROUS CRIIS, Loxpox, Janaary 24.—-It¢ is hardly posatble to overrate the dangerous churacior the ministerlal orlsis has as- sum«l, Throe cabinet councils were held Tuesday when the new ep committeo showed a majority agaiust the goverament. Tho miniater of war and marine resigned but President Grevy nrged them not to resign, He sald, “‘You aro a soldier and you are asalor, Tamquite surs you would never desert your posts under fire, but if you retire now and leave me with- out a cabinet that would ba desertion,” It cortain & miniaterial crisis is imminent, The idea of haviug Prince Jerome tried by the senate appears to have been abaudoned, Prince Jerome wanted to see a whole troop of friends under the pretext that they were his couneol. The judge d’ ivatructions al- lowed Jollibois, bonapartist deputy, to act as his counsel, also making threo advocates, but has intimated this will be the last, Thn polics make a search in the cflice of The Petit Cor poral for the manuecript of the arti- cle which appeared {n that paper, urg— ing imperialists to b active aud pross— ivg in prozlsiming Prince Victor em- peror of France, THE EX-EMPRESS 18 staying at the hotel Durbin, in the very apartment ocoupled by N apoleon before his_election as prosident, the {nterviewer she eaid, *'I have coree to France, using my right, to teatily leon, prisoner, my sympathy and forgetfuluess of all past diecords. 1 also coms to comfort Princess Ma thille. What I am doing fs oniy a affair. 1 will make no politics tion in the presence cf a waich T know nothing '’ ms 1 the hote! are taken for a week in the name of Countess Picrcetord, Mary noted bonapartiat flock Lo hotel Darbin, It i that hoth Kug, Mathilde havy r that they w 1 haa thrown the whole worktngmachine of Frane: ont of gear, RETURNS OF THE FRENCH VINTAGE for 1832 ahow a decreszo of three and A quarter milion hootlitres as eompared with 1881, acd 16 000 00) hectiitres as compared with the aver a0 the lagt ten yoars The ¢x empress ressived o number of frisuds todey avd ontertained Princess Mathildu GENERAL P()‘KE!GN NEWS. THE JEWS IN HUNGARY, Prru, Janoary 23 —In the lower house to-day Jokay energetically ad- vocated placing Jews on complete equality with adherents of other creeds. His remarks were greeted with cheers Tizy, president of the council, said the prejadics againat the Jewish race would expire through so- clal influences only, If society show- ed itself unequal to the task, then would exceptional legislation become necessary. THE COST OF RECOINING, BeruIN, January 23.—It Is stated the cost f realizivg the propoaal of bimetalalists to recoin silver of Ger] many is estimated at 20 000 00) marks A ROYAL MATCH Mabrip, January 23 —At the court reception to-day, King Alfonso an- nounced that he had reseived from Prince Louis Ferdinand, of Bavaria, a formal demand for the hand of In- fanta Marie Dolla Paz. THEATER BURNED. St, PeTERSBURG, January 23.—The theater in Milan burned. There was no performance at the time, and no lors of life. DEATH BY STARVATION, LosvoNn, Januvary 23. — Reports have reached Sligo of deaths by star- vation on the Istand of Invismurray. THE LIGHTS WERE BURNING, Hampura, Janusry 23, —According to a statemont the steamship Cimbria at 2 o’clock Friday morning Captain Hansen received a report that the Clmbria’s lights were all burning pro- perly. The braach made by the colli- sion was 80 great that the Cimbria im- mediately lay right over with a posi- tion with her deck under water. The 39 persons brought into Coax Haven had been the occupants of two boats. The other 17 persons saved were brought in by the Thela, NO MGRE FOUND, No more persons the Cimbria. A ing westward may have picked up seme of the persons. The four steam- ers have not yet returned. e —— GRASPING MONOPOLIKS. Valuable Franchlses for Nothing, New York, January 18.—The down town streets of this city were torn up all last summer to enable steam sup- plyirg companies to lsy their pipes. The privilege of keeping the streeta in an impaseadle condition and of putting the public to great inconvenience cost the companies not a cent, except what they paid to have thelr schemes log- rolled through the city councll. Now that the pipes are laid, the companies and their property are a greater nuis- ancy than ever. The pipes are of a poor quality, and two or three little explesions have occurred, fortunately without serious consequeuces, In sev- eral places, too, the stcam escapes to the surface, and comes hissing up through the cracks in the pavewent, The appearance of Exchange place, where a dozen little volcanoes snem to be in a state of violent agitation, is enough to turn the thoughts of the prudent to the value of insurlng their lives for tha benefit of their families, The escaping steam is a source cf consternation to horses, and the situa tion gives pleasure to no man or beast, except the emall boy who plugs up the holes to produce a small-sized exple- sion, The businces houses along the street denounce the whole thing as an ‘outrage, and it would not be surpris- ing if appliration were made to the courts to compsl the companies either to put down eafe p'pes or to keep steam out of them, It is thought here that Chicago would not be likely to tolorate the 1mpozitions of all sorts that are shoulderod upon the ecarcely- complaining New York public. The most valuable public franchises are given away for no consideration— at least for none that benefits the public. Elevated roads take from the public Battery park, the only fresh air-breathing spot south of Central pork in the city, and don't pay a for it. Their roads damage a good deal of business and residence property frow 25 to 50 per cent, but they pay amages, A citizen gets & verdict st them of 830,000 damagee, but tho roads have friends at court and readily procare an injunction restraia- ing themselves from paying anythirg At a Jittle town kome twenty miles up | tho river the citizens raiscd money to build a pler. Vanderbilt gets a bill throogh the leglslature allowing the New York Central rosd to buy any or all property lying between the tracks and the cast bank of the clerc, Billet and Jaurrequibury had T cane the preeent cahinet etar ia The pessibility of a ~ ADYING CONFESSION, Assisted in Four Foul The Standard’s specia!l rays the Duolers cablnet is virtually Hurders, defunct, The politleal panic s - = unabated, and fandholders RO Crimos I vsr Perpstrated 1n Modern Times, Wwomuan Toid Her Traxic Story. 8jec Freoekickr . wy, O, January 17, — Mrs E.uma Stuwell, the woman who declarcd that she bad committed four fou! taurder: last wght, A few minutes bofore she breathed her last she poeitively maintsived that the conferslon she had previously made was truo in every particular. Her dying agonies were painful in tho ex- treme, aud within & few minutes of her deceass he horrifisd all present by her profanity and hardoned d:clar tior s A Presbytorian clergymoan, ot Waterford, was entreated by the woman's father in law to visit the un. happy wretch eeveral weeks before her death., To this gentliman and to her father in-law she made the state- ment which foliows, and which was wristen by the clergymanto whom she related the details of her crimes, ““A few days ago I visited the home of Mr. Marion Stillwell, a gentleman who resides near Waterford, Kaox county, O, as & minister to see and converss with Mra. Emma Stillwell, his daughter-in-law, who was lying here in what was evidently the last stages of an incurable coneumption, She and her husband went to their father's in November last, from Ot. tumwa, Ia , and e10ce that time she had been sinking rapidly under the power of the disease. About ten days ago her phyeicians candidly informed her that there was no hooe of her re covery from the fa‘al sfll ction, This statement greatly distreseed her. “In another bed in the same room there slept another wowan, one hun- dred and one years of age, suffering the physical misery incldent to such extreme sgo. And in a oradle near the heartn wus the sick and dying child (nlne months old) «f the savage mother, who has confessed to a series of crimes uapsralleled in the anuals alto P1 alelpbin “reas, of modern civiization for thur number, thetr nature, and thelr cold-blooded atrocity, The innocant and unsuspecting husband of this unfeeling wife was that night groaning under the smart of a terrible cancer which had that day been cut from his swollen face. In the midet of these paiifil surroundings, Mra, Emma Stillwel) tured to her father- in-law, Marion Stillwell, and said: MURDERING A HUSBAND, I was born in St. Joe county, Ind in 1851, When only sixteen years «f age I wes married to Benjamin Swig- ard, a German mechanic, in Marys- ville, Mo. He was a man of indus- trlous, though at times intemperate habits,. With him I lived nine years, becoming the mother of three ohil- dren My matden nsme was Emma Hoard. I can speak the French, Ger- man and Latin languages ss well as the English, My mother's name was Susan Hoard. I have a brother ln Missouri jnamed Ohester, In 1876 my wother and brother, alded me in murcering my husband for his money. Oae evening he came hume drank I'hey threw him down on the flyor, and I struck him on the back of the head with the pole of an axe, and he soon expired. Assoon as we saw he was really dead we laid him upon a bed on his face, when mother and brother left for their own home in another part of the town, I took the children and went to & neighbor's. Here asked for lodging and protection from Ben, my husband, who, I said, had come home terribly itoxicated, aud I craved their sym- pathy and shelter till such time as so- briety and reason might return to this man whom they knew to be a faithfual husband and kind father when not crazad with liquor. All the faivors I sought were readily granted. I spent a sleepless night. Its hours wero periods of grief, intervening with ra- morse. R sing early and leaving the children, I repaired at day’s dawn to our ead and bloody home. I soon gave the alarm that Ben was dead— murdered during the night for his money. This view sremed for a time to pass as true, hut afterwardas the three——mother. brother and I--were arzested, but acqaitted for want of adequate evldence. Wa got Swig- ard’s money, about §1 000, and deeds to kome lots in the town where we then lived. SMOTHERING A GUEST, After this we keot alunch and lodg- ing house in Maryevilie, Mo, A siranger stopped one evening fir eup per and lodging. That night we three took his life in order to get his money. After smothering him with a feather bed we struck him oa the head with a hammer, We concealed his body in a piie of rubbish in the suburbs of the till wo moved ta Rockport, Atchinson county, Mo. Not long a to Rulo, Nab,, whero my by Stillwe!l, was born, Gortio, but its Ler we went firat child, father 4il not know, Details cf the Mosat Startling | Written by the Oae to Whom the We named 1t | was to was from birth puny, fretful and un. prepossessing. Aud my brother Ches ter, my mother, my aunt Betey Sum Mes, Stillwell Admits That She|Siossnd mygelt wurderod thochild among us, | tion of peach-leaf tes, and wo poured it down the giri's throat, holding her nose till she cessed to bresthe. My aunt made the tes, Cheater poured it in the child’s mouth; mother held its noso and I kept it on my knee till 1 folt the last quiver <f life die away, My brother was about to strike th child on tho head with the ehoe ham- mer, but wo t1old bim that the mark would show., As soon as wo saw that Gertie wae dend we washed her and dressed her in funeral garb, lald her out and awaited with some degree of anxiety the return «f her father that it from the ratlrond. Wo to!d him that the child bad takon s spasm, o] which, at times, it was pr-aisposo wnd to our amagement and grict b died in our hands He wuspected nothing, KILLING A MOTHER After Gertie's burial I feared to live any longer in that place, Weroon re. moved to Ottumwa, Ia., where wo rc- mained till last November, when I 0 sick that we thought best to home to Ohio, where I am now dyit But let me tell yon that whon in the west brother and T attempted twice, of er Gertlo's death, to murder her father, Wae fixed upon a night for the deed. Twice Chester and I went iuto his room when we thought him asleep, designing to take hislife. Both times he was awake, and excitingly ivquircd what wo were after, Weexoused our selves by saying that wo were hunting a rat, or checking the noise of a rat tling window, thus fully allaying all suspicion. At last, we agreed to send for mother to aid us in Stillwe'l's murder. On the journey mother mot with a rallroad accident which so dis- abled her that she lay a helpless inva 1id at our house for six monthe. Duringall this time my innocent, kind, unsuspecting husband treated her in a manner truly humane. He psii all her surgioal and medical bills, and, when she died, all funeral expenses— oven planting a plain atone to her her yrave. Must I say ii! Mother died by my own hand, and by mine alone! She had murdered my father; also an ille- gitimate shild sent to her to put out of the way. She is said to have done this deed for pay —a few dollirs She had aided in the deeds I have justtold you, We had sued the railroad of. ticera for the injary dono her; so I despatched her one night with the hammer which was used in the death of others This confession the dying woman made to the writer and to Sillwell, her father in-law, and when the sub stance of this terrible rocital was read to her she assented to its truthfalness. WM F, e THH MISSISSIFPI VALLEY. me S@ > | v Y 24 habited and uncultivated, fifty miles | wide and GO0 in lengch, from Cairo to ha gulf, 1a the richeat on tho globe, and, aith cutle's and Beypiian inateaa of levee building metiods of frrgarion ve, ita focundity will never It would quintuple the sugar crops of tho south, o navigable river with aship Lto the sea, adding 10 cents to tho value of every b 1 of grain for the prodocer and 10 cents for the con- sumer, biesusn of cheapened transpor tation, the country’s weaith wonld be as llimitablo as farms of ¢ sippi valloy iatinitely ex If roprosentatives of states and citios of tho Valloy of the Mirsissis p would perfect the heatthfuluers of great constituenecien; if they would agurandizs the citiea and states; if they would minke New Ocleana © depository f wheat and cotton for natiors, to bo delivered in Liverpool and London at prioss defring compe titlon with thoso tixed by crops of tustia aud Koypt, aud Indis; if statesmoan would restore the prosperi ty of Now Orloans and add wfuiely to the wealth of the whole country, they need only to divert the supar- abundant flhoda of the Musianippi into he Gaf and make New Ocloans se- coeible to stoamers such an must pass ] | A FE §n Dokt g asia, | (|7 WOMAN CAN\( HEALTH OF WOMA o ‘f JSYMPATHIZE WITH! H) U N WOMAN, 1,4 W o S Y 1 (i N LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND. A Sure Cure for nll FEMALE WEAK~ LOTS \NE Inclading Lencorrhan, Ir- - | regular and Painful Menstruation, Inflammation and Uleerntion of tho Womb, Flooding, P10« LAPSUS UTERI, &e. through Hell Gate In fuet, if the Misciseippi debouchod into Massachu- soits Bay, federal legislation long ago would have enabled the Great East- era to cast anchor at St. Louls, Vigor, strenzth and health all found in one bottle of Brewn's Tron Bitters. ACO TRAOE FOR P AITIN. CURES ¥ Rheumatism,Neuralgia,Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Hoadache, Toothach H. PHILLIPS, THE LEADING NEW YORK T AL L.COIR, Call and look over my new store and see my new goods. Ita Products ana Neceseities —Why the River Must Be Improved. Washington Ameriean Rogister. While the cotton crop of the United Statea was, in 1860, 3 200,000 bales, New Orleans received 2 200,000; now when the orop is 6,000,000 bales, New Orleans handles only 1,400,000 bales. In 1860 New Orleans reccived 78 000 hogsheads of tobacco; now ihe tobac- oo crop 1s doubled, and New Orleans does not sell or export 10,000 hogs- heads. In 1860 New Orleans recetved 22 per cent of the imports of the United States; now New Orleans does not import 2 per cent of the whole. In 1860 New Orleans sont to South America 35,000 barrels of flour; now not a barrel, Of 200,002,000 pounds of coffse imported annually, 70 per cent coming from Rio Janetro, only 20,000,000 pounds enter New Orleans, and yet the valley of the Mississippi comeumes 165,000,000 pounds, A ship cactain will give & bill of lading at Rio, requiring him to deliver a cargo of coffee in Chicago or St. Louls via New York City, using a ship of 5,000 tons burden, for less money than it costs him to deliver it in Now Orloans inaship of 2,60) tons. The secret, which is no secret, conslsts in the fact that Wew Orleans is inaccessible by the largest ships from the sea, and great railroads from the west employ Eads and the river commission to pre- vent the incoming of great veseels capable of carrying ‘‘grain in bulk” at New York rates from New Orleans to the world'smarkets, While the congress of the United States de- liborately invests hired agents of the reilroads with supreme power over the fortunes of the people of the valley of the Miseissippl, they will be robbad annually of not le:s thau §200,000,000 or the sum they wculd eave by resort- ing to water instead of railway trans. portation; while the government ¢x pends countlees millions at Hell Gate and other points about New York that ships drawing forty feet may have ac- cess to that city, this railway.ruled government is content while there railways subject westorn farmers to an annual loes of $200,000, because the Miesissippy, at the behests of rail- way owners or their agents, the river commission, must remain forever a *‘mare clauaum.” There is no plainer duty imposed which the poople of the west dreamed ¢f beingsubjscted when they tod oongrossmen whose duty it open & sea goleg route for farmeras of the great v v to the 1207 Farnam Strect. 1207. Under the management of Mr, Kalish, DexterL, Thomas&hro, WILL BUY AND SELL, IO . EISICL TR AND ALL TRANSACTIONS OCNNECTED TURREWITH, Pay Taxes, Rent, Houses, Eto, ROOM 8 ......CREGHTON BLOCK M. HORWICH & CO., DRALER IN Paper Stock, Woolen Rags, Iron AND METALS, Highest Prices Paid. Shipments from the country solicited. Kemittancee Omana | Promptly wmnde | Nm» TREASURY DEPARTMENT. CP¥ICK OF COMPTROLLER 0 Tifk CURRENCY ) Washicgton, Decomber 80, 1882, Witkrkas, By satisfactory evidence presonted to the undersigned, it has been mado to appear that “THE FIRS I NATIONAL BANK OF CMA- HA,” in the cit; <f Omaha, in tho county of Douglas, and State of Nebrasks, has coa'pliod with all the provis ors of the “Act of Congress to erable Na ional Banking Associations to ex tend their corpora’e existenco and for other pur. voio " approved July 12th, 1852 Now,Tikrsrok, 1, Joha J. Koox, Comptroller of the Currency, do horehy certity that *“Tho First National Ban' of Omaha,” in tho city of Omaha, in the county of Doug as, and rtat of Nebrask, 1 authorizid to have succession fortho period specificd in in its amended articles of aso ciation, na ely, until (ho fclose of busincss en December IN TF wnd scal of ofti 2 1902, INY WHEREOF, witness my hand this 30th day of Decon:b 2, (ieamtemyy 1 mea | Comptroller of 1 No. 200, a4 m DR. F. SCHERER, oy n s Physiciap and Surgeon. CIRONIC DISKASRES A SPRCIALTY. Medlcines tarnished at office. OTes N. W. corver 13th and Farnam etreete, aver Morchant s National Bank, Omaha, Neb. Offoe Hovrs—9to11:20a. m,, 1 toband 7 to 9p m Resddenco 1114 outh 13th steso, Matter of Application of A Snowden plication to the May for li to sell’ Malt, Spirite liquors at No. 312 4 wth 13th street, Third ward, Omaha, Neh., from the 147 day of February, 1853, i he | upon that body, which ehould promose | to the 11th dity of April 1x53 town, These remains were not dis- | universal commercial and agrioultural [, 1f ther bo no objoction, Fomonatrance or, pro covered for weeks, and whon found | prosperity, than this involving the | b it Wl 00 ) were 87 much changed by natural de- | pening of as perfect 4 waterway from J A B BNOWDEN cay as to hiave been unrecognizible by |tho sea to New Orleans a8 from the | 1. omaa fee neweaper will s ihe the man's most intimate friend; his| Atlantte to the wharves of New York | a1 cach wouk for w0 wecks at the name or home we never learned. City. If Hell Gato st be blown cut . ficwnt, T clty of Owmalia Iy " H 5 y ¥ d therowith In 1878, I firat mot your son, L V. |in the one case, & ship cha ), L. C. Jkwert, City Clork Stlllwell. After a short acqnaintance | by carved out ia the other, 5 we were ‘mw:mld" At /‘l;,.(..u.;,/t "_"' of thin the valley of the Missisrippi iy B Junction, Mo, I first made his ac-|uiven over by congress to the te: Kaufmun Lice nse, quaintace, but we wero not married | mercles of @ 1ival commissto Free .GED. P.BEMIS, £ Ploasant to tho taste, eflicacions and fmmediate itawffoct. 1t lengreat helpin prognancy, and re- eves pain during lahor and at regular perfods. , FIYSICIANS USE IT) AND PRESCRIDE IT FREFLY. B ALL WEAKNLSES Of the generative organe ither sex, 1t 1a tono remedy that has evee Buen befors the publicy and for all discases of the XINEYS 1t 13 tho Greatest Remedy (n the World. '$¥"KIDNEY COMPLAINTS of Either Se# Find Great Reliefin Its Use. Lands-§ Farms, £ Bott the Componnd and Blood Puiifier are pre- parvd at 2% and 2% Western Avenuo, Lynn, Mass Prico of elther, §1. Six bottlea for g8 Tho Compouna sent by mail ir tho form of pills, or of lozenges, on ecelpt of price, 81 per hos for efther, Mre. Pinkham. ecly anawers all lotters of inquiry. Enclose 3 cend BY amp. Bend for pamphilet. Mention this Faper. YOIA B, PINKHAN'S LIVER FILLS curs Constipe- T s o Aorpiiy of The Liver, B0 e £3Sold by all Droszists. 68 2] ERSONAL- Ked, doveloped an ad ort) Parts of. the huvan body nither ed,” ete,, '» lorg ron in our 4 wo will say that agab ur thie, On contrary, the advertiv rs ar. verv highly in- dorsed. Intores od persons v ay get & al d oir- culars giving all part particu- Inrs, by addressing . Box fuffalo, N. ¥ 15th &Douglas St. A hargain, $600 No. IR—Large two story house, 10 rooms, two large cellarm, ¢ od wel. and ciaterd, bain, otc., en W1 bater and 220 streot, 86,000, No 17—Let 60XI¥6 foet, now house of two ; rooma brick foundation 100 barrel ecistorn on A | Hamilton strect noar Poor ClareCorvent $600. + i !lr‘:::fi‘g;flltl)?ll\”‘“nl::mé l:.:‘:J. 17th near Clark 8t. W FURNAGES,IN, THE WORLB. RICHARDSON,BOYNTON &00 No. 16—Houss of 5 rooms tull lot on Plerce St. ICHICAGO,. 1LLS, near 19th #1600 Embody new 1888 Improvements. Mos. foaruros; to keep in "’%“‘Fu ose fael Cell e more. bt No. 21- New houseot 7 rooms, with corner lot, half mile west of Turniable of red stroct cars on and a'largor volume of pure air aay turnace mado. Sau dersSt. $10.0. 80ld by Plercy and Dradfow), Omaha. . HOUSES AND LOTS, E iy . B Z E 0. 19—Full ot aud new house, 'Sfirooms, two & be'ow and one up-stairme. Kl ht foot celling be'ow = = and cevenabove. Brick foundation, collar, ete. B El E & ie g & = No. 6—Houso of (ight rooms, barn etc. lot 60X16) feet §2500. Vacant Lots. No. 262—Two tull lots o 19th Btreet near Lake Bt. $1600. STABLISHKD 1868, 0.3 1—Twonty five lots In Parkers addition Just north of the end of red street ear line $400 ‘ach vasy terms, No.3:0—Four lotson Delaware £4. ncar Hans. k, £600, ne halflot on South avenue, near V's avonie, ¥ 0 i 18) lots on 214t, 22nd, 23rd Loar G ee, $900 each, and and Swund D Casy LCFIR, No, 346 Six beautiful residence lots on Cathor- 1ne stroet, near Hanseom park, $4,500 Twolve bosutitul residence lots cn Hawifton stroot, near end of old streotcar track; high und sightly, 8360 to §700. Soveral aore and halt acre corver lots on Cum. Iog, Burt avd Californis stieets, In Lowe's sec- ond addition and Park Plaes—near Acadomy of Sacted Heart. Lotw 'n “Prospect Place” Charlos strect, ju t of th Car tinck and Co Clare, one and on wny m lo from U, 3 only b per cent down and 5'per cent per month Lotsin Lewo's adi ono-halt il end of Red Stre ¢ Car track nes onvent of Poor Clare S sters bn Shinn's addition, $126 to and on vory eary terme. and 2nd additions, o's 20d addition Rizan's nscom Place, Redick's ad- SIDE SPRING ATTACHMENT—NOT PATENT ED. A. J. SIMPSON. LEADING CARRIAGE FACTORY 1400 and 1411 Dodge Streat, aug 7-me 6m Owmana, Nen Nebraska Loan & frust Gewnany HASTINGS, NEB. Oapital Stook, - - $100;000. on Hamilton and d of Red 8 rcet Siwters of Poor pestoftice and to §00 cach, c., ot ilre It Foncler addition Just one- quirter milo wouth-cast of Union Pacifl: and B, wid M, K. K. depots, $260 to §1,600 each, very ensy torms, Business Lots. Threo good businoss lota on Dodge near 12th streot, 2/x120 foct each, $1,600 vach, or 4,500 for JAS, B, HEARTWELL, Presidant, A. L. CLARKE, Vico President, WEBSTER, Troasurer PIRECTORS, wll, eaky terme, Samuel Aloxander, Oswald Oliver, Two kood burinoss lots on Farnam A L. Ciatke, E. C. Véobstor 66 fest cach, with frame buildings th ‘. Jas. B. Hearvwell, JH Prate, for abrur 8400 per year cuch; price L e Y 443132 foct on Farnam near 10.hstavor, corner £12 000, Bplwndid Warehouse lot on Union Paciffe right First Mortgage Loansa Specialty on 106th st Douglas, Barpy S antos Farms w d wid lands Dodg s, Washington. B other kood counties i 1axed pall, routs This Cempany furnishes o permanent, home tustitutian where School Bo. sand othes legally iseued Municipal securitie 9, Nubraska can be bo negatiated on the m> 1 avorabd berma. Loans made 00 fmproved 31 u n all wel' settled counties of the state, thi\ t 1 wponsible local correspondents, Sioux Gty & Faoifio Ruvs a Kolid Trala 1hrough trom Qouncil Elnits to S8t, Paul Without Onange Tim Caly 1T Hours 1 A@HES HLN3 THX YHORTES ROUTR ROy DOUNOIL BLUFF3 TO 8T, PAUL, MINNEAPULIE DULUTH OR BISUARCK and ell polute in Worthern lowa, Mionss. ia aud D Thie line is oquipped wiih dhe lwpro, nouse Automatic Alrbrake and Mille ¥ aud Buffe , BAFETY AND COMPORY , arJ woney loased on improve! city and country o, erty at low rates of futeroat BEMIS' NEW CITY MAP, FOUR FEET WIDE ANDSKVEN PEET LONG, WITH HEVERY ADDI- TION RECORDED OR CONTEM- PLATED UP 7O DATE., “OFKFFI- CIAL MAP OF THE CITY.” $6.00 EACH, h o8 oL > \ If ~u! gy " aco Hleey Ly thowmselves ou coustry Huason river. Vauderbilt eccops in | till we had been marr.ed a year and | of Mexico, Congress had no right ¢ T O U BH ANGE betoch Kehs otuer authorlty Ec-Emprors | the pier and rofusos to let steamboats | ha'f, that I had ever boen married bo- [ dulezate its authority, sud, o ba o objaction, T ranes or | s Citysud Bh Peal, via Coaucl kiufs end Eagenie withes inctly come up to it, which s a good thing [ foro, or was tho mother of three chil- | all, to mombers of o commission who | tes. it fiom Jav. G A, | | M= na'ee a4 Doun stood that her prose for the businezs of the railroad n. Loarving this ho was deaply |inight bo facile wyous of great cor. | - 173 the said o il b gt . s ol Bl op atrival Ienss wrouzh some Locus-pocus that will | grieved, and profoundly indignant, s tiona (aven if v { . ] Clby voll Hink'e saln from h | ! s porationa (sven if A < %y at Sioux Olty 11:40 po 8., y @ very intercating roading when | mash a0 that he et o aud wout | fuciod by . Hlaycr), s |* i owana por will i h tho | LState o §*Lopoh ad o4, Facl ac 118D - Lt fa ) pu A few|Denver, Col. Soon after I followed | hey v k A t | aban v 8| isiand when it waa s barron w Tc [ deception, and making many good | If the poliey of {7 e, Pl City Ren ‘ a8 public itk “ ‘:rl'.““ «-‘~I1 Lhr‘q’..\ fa rl-‘ .. W |:, tain and' the reas:sammixsion | t 5 T Throu e, _.“'hu:hu tive assiat. | lukon ""' 8 favor, usband deariy | that the we tnajy ) AR open water " 4 (ZITL "N | 'Thrcugh = | ould have | loved Gortie, and che thus became an | route to consumers of w :.un | ALMA E. KEITH, Ageu(:y,' DUNGLS, BLUVIS AND €% P A fur the privilege of this|active and «fl:isnt function of our re- | duots, not anly will westera farmers | W losalo sl Retail | | o T Do 1oh ST, Ibis #top by [ magnificont coean front; tho capital- |union. Agsn we lived lovingly [ bo enabled o sell all thoy now pro- ¥ OO B | 98 WATILES, T J. 8 BOCHAJAR 0010 Womaa 13 pOrt | jsts, however, got it tor asong. A |together. Leaving Donver in a fow | duce, but production will be stimu H&'ia E‘ ij N btk L feotly natural and 1 f dozon men, In & word, have monopo- | months, we returned again to Rulo, | lated so such an extent that railways w 15”‘ d D | St W. B DAVIS othwestorr Passenver FRACTIOALLY DEFUNCT, lizad for thelr own aggrandizement|whero my husband becams a rail-|will gain in other business and sug | Correct aud relisble Waves o Specialty. an ouglas St Coasall Biude * At the third _c.duu t conneil, at 9 |natural advantages which by tortuous roader. mented quantity of freight transported MASQUERADING WIGS, Sv—————————— = o'clock last eveniog, watters were lcfi | means they have secured practically | CHOKING A DAUGHTER, all that is lost in prices now paid for |y Farmam Et, Omahs, Neb. * BLACK-DRAUGHT " cures &y wpeop - practically unsettled, Tae cabinet | for nothiog. | Tnever really loved Gertle, She this service. The dlstrict now wunin. ? Omaha - . Neb, At TGN wnd T earvhaum.