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—~¥ THE DAILY BEE---OMAHA, MONDAY JU E 25, 383, ————— - s P UL VU O | . all Took as though they might be capable . res eetfully, \. L. Bannen of it. hey have finished the third read- S A Glimpse ot the Work of the OmABA | tis vear, something wover botore sc. | 106 Colorado Sandstone Syndicate Snc- % ) | / " S N Pablic Selool complished, we helieve. They were do ssfly. Bulldoze the Board iy P bl b ,, 0ic Sehools, Fing = some. suned & S ehbtANGEASS CoSSIILLY 6 e Board, | \: . l‘.,‘l.l-m.,,- of Hmllm:ndlulf puhlic } : At . | Their teacher said, “f there are . {works - held on Saturday, bids were | » The Methods Adopted and Systems |1 ‘f‘;‘l" g i'”-;"“‘- 428 “'“:‘!'“”"‘l:- i8] The Bide for Cross Sereer Paving opened for the furnishing of necessary | MUSI C._D_E_ALERS Pursued by achers, | than half a minute by the watch half o] Narber Believes in Asphalt and "'“‘“’;““ l'“ pave """"“'; f‘l"""‘“ of thia: OMAHA, NEB. | i : e o city. Bids were received for o N | - |dozen hands were waved aloft and the wJL 8" Greavitates on Granite, | - b wl THE g A e e s e e [ e T o , S s | NTNE LEADERS I Sanford’s Radical Cure ! b traction was given, the names of familiar ; & P Rlicet mpbalt on 10 years guacantes for 6800 | O s e e Greal. M4 Wiksh Hasel, at the Central School, | persons being used instead of the stere- | Bids for Paving Cross Streets Re per square yard, | IMPORTANT TO BUYERS OF American anadian Fi, Marigol, 5 - ped Jones and Smith. *Mr. Miller ml';""l (ii' AFnhnzrlulll-'“ith«w-m-rnw (.‘.....mu....‘JEWELRY HOUSE . * Blossom, Ete., 35 bushels of potatoe Yoyl of C WO ¢ L85 per square yard ¢ t Catarrh, from a simy well be in Franice for all the poople here | e e 4 e tatet 'f',‘; Y k"“ - |ing Saturday evening and opened bids | vand foundation at 4.2 per square yard, Simell, Ta 100 5.8 ot} ¢re | els has Mr. Miller left” The work was |, e naving of the cross streets be. | Saudstone blocks with broken stone and sand | Visitors can here find all the novelties v, et le know of them,” said one of the brightest | performed immediately and proved by [ St foundation, 83,40 per square yard by R. G. | in Grate, Tragtant, i ve ok e | of the Iady tenchers at the Central school | addition. ~ Soveral Tittle boys and girly | twoen Dodgo and Horney strects, as fol- | Jenkimon: 0 Rl first application, and s Permanent, and | g0 s1° pechebot " | brought up their slates to show how neat- | lows: Sandstone blocks with broken stane and sand | Out of the many hundred manufac- ev. 5::1::3“[(;;‘. :‘ :‘-‘1":::1- n'fhzl“:x:])‘u.lv;l:o ly gh.-.\i had done |l.'.v,r ;\l..:.k_ '|~|,,.l_‘. ”"‘\“ SANEER & 00 (\ntlv‘-‘]‘-“:l:-‘; 83,60 per wquare yard by .|,.||\.-~>SILVERWARE, CLOCKS, turers of this line ufy goods, we lay dl‘-“ a8 Bel ere to write o1 . ot- | gave definitions of addition and sub had i, b \ to representing the leading makers, compi et or 61 ting the city at all points are its public |traction and told what the commission ‘"“‘,}:j‘:"},""‘.’l‘l‘m ,::‘;,{f;‘:_',f.":l"“;::,“:_:‘c'g R Lo ulifecter o, tia aipiilt | RICH AND STYLISH JEWRLRY, cati tHow & mobe coniplEts SUITTRNNNEIN Co., Boston, % and Chenileal | 3 ool buildings, many of them costly | business is. Miss McCheane haa four ROV CEUBT £ 0 BRI S N S S b g L e k of Pianos and Organs than can be found For the reliet_and pre | X , Y | rows of seats in her room which indi. | fcations (five years guarantee), per square | observe the same, at present, while it is | The Latest, Most Artistic, and Choicest|in ane ONE House in the west. Our COLLING: e INeiaNT 1" 'Y structures, filled with busy little: boys | ©HR @RS T 0 ORI e, (he | Yard, 82,98, 3 .. |laid upon our streets, and form his own | Selections in NINE LEADERS are the following well- YourAlg,”, ut Kheumatirm, Nouts and girls working nine months i the |G yow being the most hone |, Shoet asphalt—Sue as above, (with | judgment about it. ‘Roganding the two | Ynown ki celebate ARG Wi year, yet they are seldom visited andstill |orable, and_ aristocratic in its bearing to | E years guarantee), per square yard, ll-uh-tlnl' v ot "'(lh-' price| IPrecicous Stomnes | oivway PIANOS, [ kS . o other ro They are “bees in | S5OV . emanded by them for a five or ten years et AL e e less froquently described. The Central '}n“ e e j:“l .}'s.'""i Resetting and adjusting gutter, whoro | guarantee, 1t appears. that tho Ay AND ALL DESCRIPTIONS of CHICKERING PIANOS, =) school building, better known as the :1: e & et l.'-‘(I.Hr“::n:h:;f...';ll‘ll.- needed, to the erown of paved street, per | oknowledges the fact that after a five | KNABE PIANOS, ZEUeTRion i High school, was found to be very much | plackboard, Here also are the names of | ¥1Uare yard, 50 cents. | years' use their_product will need are-|FINE W ATCHES O BLad4) ;i o e ; W Resetting and adjusting old curb, per | Jair of at least 53¢ per square yard, if the | ’ PEASE PIANOS, LASTERS 18 ; crowded, rooms and hallsthat were never | the *little raindrops,” or scholars who |, Resettng And A T e AN ARION PIANOS. i at pain, everywhere, Sntand e . 86 Aas choc ovoms | come whether i OTIS y > -y y o material should be serviceable for another S L PRICES o Tae Pubi s e il b O s r..lf:.‘fl.‘; Furnishing and setting new curh stone, | ive years, and this only should they be| o e SCHONINGER CYMBELLA ORGANS, ek and enlarged ‘Schenmt o 4 drovon Hiomscton | Puratus which will [ morning, there were thirty little. rain, | Where needed, per lineal foot, 85 cents. [able’ to control the = repairs of the | A8 is compatible with honorablo dealers. | CLOUGH & WARREN ORGANS, 7 CAPITALIPRIZE, 875,000, Tickets only | Placed in their new buildings when they | drops. i MACK & (0, strects themselves. Tt s reasonable | Gull and see our elogant new store, STERLING IMPERIAL ORGANS, 85, Shares in Proportion. are completed. But_this appears to | it oo e Sioux Folls granite, conerute foundu- | 0 81ppose that if only five years guarnn R o We want everybody desiring a Piane make no difference with the orderly ap- | Mig J. Wilson has & room in the base- | tion, 84.85. tee is desired that after the expiration of | Tower Building, or Organ to call or write to us for infor- pearance of the school. The thousand | ,ent, where are seated forty-six scholars | Sioux Falls granite, with broken stone | (10 time the cost to keep the strects | pNpR 11TH AND FARNAM s, | Motion and GET POSTED, = We can sell scholars in the central school building as- | ot"tho" A" and B classes of the fourth | foundation, $4.26. paved with asphalt will amount to 81 or you the best instrument made for the - cond and descend the stairs, &0 {rom | grade. “She had a cluss spelling words of | ~ Limestone, with concrete foundation, | Sven % I ':{,“‘;:“’,‘?;.":‘;,;'.“"'.:‘:{":l.‘,l.\ b ,""“\{'{’", BY M"“ prom to roomy ive wnd leave with per | tho same sound, spelled diflorently, and | 83.9. i vour, or in fiftoen yeams it would-cost the| MAX MEYER & BRO., | vou, as wo kuow we can satify ovorybody . ect syster eportment. 'Te Are | there were frequent change: til ime: p, with broken stone fo o | TS ko vl o 4 o > ok ) A, e : Lonisiana Ttate Lottery COMDANY |ewenty rooms in the graded departument |ane “ e Tiileet changos of ponition | Lingatome, with broken stone founda- | anoint paid for” when originally luid from our Nine Leaders, which are ¥soog® “We do hereby certify that we supervise the a- | With, ot the present moment, 864 schol- | o, A smart-looking little Ger-| Gutters, etc., eorresponding with "M.!llnwn.nr in twenty years it would reach | MANUFACTURERS OF zed by those posted, as the best made. 3’,’,'.’{:;’,:‘“ ’r;r'all the .‘luns!‘M'y ;m’x’l Snr:x'-Amuu.u ars, and in the high lchuo(l properare | uan girl was at the head of | ber's bid, 750, il’x. and &1, l]u; cost .{f granite }m\'u}l;:ut. which l’|l1‘wu d for catalogue and price list. =" 98 0 ouisiana State Lottery Company. | five more teac e out ¢ o1 3 3 ) not need repairs for fi years. 0 o ferin e ot e Brvor | 10 Befo g0 Sewchabout0students, | ehe claan and | kopt Her | place JAMES STRPIENSON, aranite v e onger n paving materinl S HOW CASES || MAX MEYER & BRO, naelves, and that th are conducted with 03 L hirough the recitation. The tow-heads af 4 At ok e - | 758 Ltk o 'tH6 .} ) | } WAREROOMS, good faith toward atl pas . THE FIRST GRADE. the foot of the class looked as sheepishas | . .\nndrhnn, with broken stone founda- | for trial, as the same has, throughout the J feate, with facsiniiicn of oue simatusas avtached. | Miss Schlesinger has in her room fifty- | thoy usually do in that position. ~This | tion, 83.69. 5 e oLV A large stock always on hand. Cor, 11th & Farnam Sts., Omaha. WUt Sdoerttremenes » - | four little boys and_ girls, who compose | room having finished the third reader, [ Gutters, ete., 4be, 1oc and 81.50. ing """:“""“ PN '""“" "!'t‘l“'l'““ll' — - the A class, the very firststep in the long | the board of education has loaned _copies JRNKINSON & 0 PR B D g dita A L Bl P ’ upward course of the eight grades. These | of the Webster-Franklin advanced third | Sandstone block (Fort Collina], with | it 8ll climatic influences th contractor W. F'. STOEIT'ZEL,, children have never been at school be- |reader for supplementary work. The | broken stone foundation, 83,40, s et R R fore, and are here taught their letters, to | study of geography is commenced in this | Gutters, ete., 81.85, 10c, and 8175, |0 heed any further comment. In lot- g y of geography , ote., H16i61 4016 con LA, tor Beving Bl 1 spell by sound and to read ensy sentences. | grade, twenty-two pages being taken in| The bid was claimed to be informal, | P8 ‘”(.“‘" i kv:“\mu:x;- g'rulmm SELLS THE BEST The children had ovidently bostowed |the fiat,of the Belectigserics by Van An- | auds pyotest wasigbtared by, Staphenson this gtikrasteb for AUraBILLY of thit iy great labor upon their slates! which were | twerp, Bragg & Co., Cincinnati. against its being reecived. AU sttt ry P cofamosms, |0l neatly printed. A class of abeout | Miss Stull haa the Band O clusen of | Tho board recommended, by a vota of | 0f sMerial would be given, s it ws too e i twelve were reading from the first reader | this grade, forty-nine pupils, | two to one, that distriets 3, 4, 5. 6 and 7 | 151 IRESTRAEE Y EIE T SREREOT B Incorporated in 1805 for 25 years by the legislature | ©f the Appleton serics, a very excellent | They. were reviewing for | be paved with Colorado sandstone. i i ”“:{L i Ao g for educational and charitable purpases-with » cape | work prepared by the superintendent of |the - examinations which begin W SRR SO y L 000,000 ~to which &, reserve fund of over | the Cleveland and St. Louis schools and | next Monday, and we were given an op- BL T B G, Toukiudn, Bl Tor. $5.40 by 3 By an overwiy oodiar vote its tranchise | the instructor of elocution at Yale. The | portunity to see the modern method of asbilialisteveinont, T e 40 per was maie s part o, the “present ‘state constitution | children are first taught the words as | feaching geography. On the wall hune 5 oo e i T e IN THE CITY. A endorsed. 1y | WhOle Words, the sounds are then desig- | a large outline map of the United States, ol sl | vl e e Ll L aThe oty Lottsy ecer cotedon and. endorsed b | {07 o fnally the letters of the word. | without auy printed names. of localitios, | Tothe Eitorof Tun B, i e el s 1t never Scales or Postpone It will beseen that the A B C system has {all the citios being indicated by stars. | Dyap Sir.—In reply to some criticisms | jy "mh,m":“,ch" 't Fort Colling, Cole., | These Stoves tok the premium at the New York State Fair in 1852, where_they wore put on actual trial by Its grand single number drawings take become a thing of the past. The reading | With a pointer one of the scholars would AL AT L. PR dst, In & (i Ty i "l-i rienced Judges, in competition with leading Eastorn Brands, which are far superior to all plkcE o ntAI g gs take | W astonishingly good. and enterely frec | indicate all the rivers in_ Tlinois, for in- | % 3phalt pavements, lately made by an- Tlll(.l\ l1I-no. n t]un L‘n;nnlu ion “l would stern Stoves, especially in quality of Tron, Fine®Baking and economy in all kinds of fuel TONE Seventh Grand Drawing, Class G, at New or. | punciation of words so commonly noticed | places _in Michigan. Being questioned | the following facts: e 3 Port Colline’ mi:'zpqm\, JULY 10, 1583 h Monthly | in sn_mll children. : about Nebraska, they showed a very in-| 1. Oyer six hundred thousind square :::‘,,:;:::“,L‘ ,I:{:::;:i(|,.;'{“.‘::,‘:, i‘,.”::,;tuill:]‘:‘:‘ H A R D w .A. R E ! PITAL PRIZE, §75,00. i oo, Ot TR orprst of their own state. | ordy of the Trinidad sheetasphalt pave- | that class of sndstone i hardly fit for KETS ks FIY . <rac:|omes of the B and C class, quartered in |} § - ; Vi adh \ 1000 IS o ¥IVE POLLARS Eact. rcs on, of the T and O clage apuriored | T8 oreine for imvigorating | dhen | ment in use for from one o ten years n | e in foundation walls of very common 521 South Tenth Street [rprp— [ building, which is used a8 schoolroom |after study, in which ~they ~rise | the cities of Boston, New York, Phila- (DUitings. Itwil never stand tho tost i | CAPITAL Ptz | temporarily. The children are taught |on their toes and inhale, holding their | delphia, Washington, Buffalo, Eric and | }oorq‘of ;,"T,“: works, if such npm‘"i(ifli 1 b here to combine numbers from one to ten, | hands in_ different positions on the wrist | 10w hore, prove most conclusively that | tions are enforced; which calls for a sand. | Y 1 and their ciphering is neatly done. In |and retaining the breath for a considera- B i ) : ; done., | (FRIINGILN9, DEOAYY, 10 (oI | the fear you express, thatthe marks which | stone of good quality, free from grainand 5 this room also the first lessons in writing | ble interval. This very healthy exercise 1 . Sinololooc ausiy, S8 Sopigrain fad 2 are given, the letters being copied from | is pursued in many of “the lower grades. | appear during a few hot days in Summer ture. The samples submitted (u) the MANUFACTURER OF OF STRICTLY FIRST-CLASS o 100 models drawn on the blackboard by the| THE FIFTH GRADE, on the sides of streets freshly lnid with | i, 3 T SRECE SRR O | eme b ] tonchor. Tho desks in this room are uf pilmL Wilson s the A’ class of the | auplat, is groundless and that they wil |\ 03 5, “eamimed by S i g 1000 attern, handsomely finished. At | fifth grade, about fifty scholars. She had i ar i ime. I n6 | show'the nve ifioati h i e ; e et | Beek s 4o themn Short doseription of | 1L disuppens i n short time. 1t ia no | show the lu%-rnnf_u(rn.l.nn;nym mull.l‘uull» R 9 Approximation prizes of 87 | exactly in the center of each desk, and | carrier pigeons, and they were writing on | new thing for non-experts to be alarmed | ination, with o mixture of iron already H o ° & do 20 | thero was & general air of neatness. their slates from memory what they had |at this characteristic. Time will prove |in a state of decomposition. It would — g heard. Some gave & v full rum’.mhw_ to you as it has proven to others, that be unfair tnnup\mmv that the i‘l."m n w 1967 Prizos, amounting to........ # THE SECOND GRADE, tion of the matter, others caught only at | these marks are temporary ~blemishes | composing the board of public works o clubs should enls bemade | Nfiug Mack has the C class of the first |the main idens. Two or three wrote |only. Proof of this is found in the fact | would hesitate a minute, while their abil- { giving tul | grade and the A class of the second, | enough to cover two sides of their slates, | you state that these marks are not visible Yo qualicy, gl MBSALER0 0s : &/ ? 4 e most interesting thine noticed here was | punctuation and capitalization. They | the center of pavement is exactly | i d 2 2t A L or M. A, DAUPHIN, o fi\‘.m'v)i\):fi..‘,‘,:,'\.' . | the mode of teaching language, known ;L"“]\- thmetic ..,4' far as compound | like the sides in every respect, as far as |our public thoroughfares in accordance fi 607 Seventh St., Washington, . C. | once as object lessons, There are a|numbers in this room, the geography of | its composition is eoncerned. A |.u,|\.1vmh samples submitted. s LS By G number of highly. colored pictures used | tho United States, Canada and Mexico, | traflic will leave marksin cither place, | In "“'"'l‘""""'» a8 :‘I""“ ‘“]‘ woll e N in this exercise, Taking up one of |and read one-half of the fourth reader. | these will disappear as the traflic increases. that standstone of the quality proposud these tho teachor deseribos the scono rep | Miss Morse s about fifty scholars, |and thus the puvement is - constantly ini- | could not, under the wmoet filwral con- resented to. the scholurs, and then | who, when we entored, wer doing some | proving for years. Aeciction of s shonlfen bty by epand; pois ) they write what " they - can about | blackboard work in the roduction of de- | 2 POET e SO iy parig, B Finttlas Phluting and Trinmiie: \e promptly done. it on h slates. 1¢ | nominate numbers, such as reducing |~ We are ready to bond for any length o R e T q - o/ & 3 i g NEB. Bek representative selected a picture | 39,567 inches to higher denominations, | time. You simply pay your money and | HRAVYAWHIGHTS, AiL0; HamneyiHinvey e ' LOUISIANA STATE LOTTERY (Q |%nownas “The Bird's Funeral,” and de- | As'a test of rapid work, Miss Morse de- take your cho T g 4 7 0 ‘ai d that something be written upon |gived the Bi 1an to give out some table| For ten {-‘zll'rffim pmi‘]: is $3.60 ]]mr An Accidental Meeting of Solid Men, s hat, promising that the best essay should )¢ writtel o8 whi > C od | 8quare yard. you will pay us what - B. Frank Moore. |1 b o i s | o “he ool sqoare misnprs was | ione pivomt will os. 1 Oy | A curiou s emtively ncidental et 127 La Salle Street. Chicago, |mediately a brisk and excited cleaning | first tak One youngman had it all |With first-class material, in first-class {ng took place at the breakfast table’ab up of slates and a bending over them of | neatly written out before his tencher had | manner on a_concrete base like ours, | sl . o ok Formerly 810 nd 212 Uroaduay N ¥) | busy heads, while little brows were | counted six, and others followed rapidly, | (and the peculiar soil of Omaha will per- | the Millard hotel yesterday mon Now Manager of Chicago Office. To whom apply for | . inp1aq and little fists clenched tightly | the c scupying one minute, The | mit of no first-class work without such a | which is worthy of note. 1 tios d tickets, 15%th Monthly wrinkled anc e '8 olenche ghtly | the count occupying one inute. he y AL e oS Moty about the pencils, - Now and then on | able of avoirdupois weight was dono in o base), we will guarantes. our pavement | ix ontlemen, all commmervial travel- BALLOONS, would rub his head or gaze intently at|third of a minute by some, and the writ- | for fifty years. £ gl Iles own' to breal Y . Tuesda,y Ju]_y 10tk | he ceiling, just as we all do in_ composi- |ing was weat, tho lines straight and oven, | - A# to absolute perfection in a pave- | 4™ 5t "n.::.'.1'...‘.:.r,‘.“krrfll:‘,:3‘.::]':::-' fodke : 4 tion, At the end of five minutes the | Some physical exercises were then token, [ment I do not expect to find it until 1| Bt SRR (R, BCIOVLE, B L it Capital Priac, 875,000, Tickets 8. il i1 | work was examined, and the following by | but the pupils at this age do not show travel the golden streets of the New |y | o aad Areichts opith el f] 4 ] " at 1 each, See full scheme clsewhere, AroaveRE] od hiohtl ddsidad el ! R0, 8 Y| Tacusalom. whare all et bayh 3 he names and weights of the gentle. Anna Kalish, aged eight, décided to be|the interest or animation in|d om, call g )p ng men go. | oo e follows: A. L. Klenfeltor. 3 ___|the }')estin 1»0|n|m|x}|);ip uu‘il ;engthb: _ |this work that is displayed in the Mcunwl"lvul maintain i hat for earthly | &y B TO01: G B, Benmett, of St. SEND FOR PRICE LIST TO THE HEADQUARTERS. “I can see two girls and four boys in |lower grades. The cal exercises | use, no other pavement can compare 210: Rty JAS. H PEABODY, M. D. | the picture, o boy-and . il avo drmwrini | wors bt -“The Toro Vagabondns and | With the smuoth. shoot ssphalt Yr....'urny 0.5\ s ot oot T | INAL VI Meyer & Co. the cart, there is little dead bird, and | ghat beautiful selection commencing, |Inid on a solid concrete base, and for the |5 ©. Walworth, of Chicago, 200, the little bird will be in the grave, the | “The golden ripple on the wall,” were | following reasons: / and F. E. Bead, of Medford, Mass., 190, = little boy is crying.’ { well rendered in unison. Portia's speech, | 1. It is n sanitary pavement, it has no : 3 1 ! Rastionts This room and the iwo lower ones are | *“The Quality of Mercy,” was given, and | joints into which offensive matter can MW m. to 5 p. . , | dismissed at 3: Before leaving, Miss | Shakespeare and this charagter dis- | settle, to return in noxious vapors that 1 | Mack’s scholars sung this pretty verse, in | cussed. produce sickness. It promotes the health | The E. M. A. Rememb S which they are always careful “ts substi-| Miss Andrews has forty-five in the B "f.’Un' city % Dead Breth G U N S Iul«"anmlny for “‘hr»mnn'nw. when {class, On the board were three large| 2. {ltnsn|llfvm\.:lv?_sk[ulv;:lllunt]. lu_pm- | Saturday comes around. | maps in colored chalk, two of North and e comfort alike of people driving | 1, 1, M, A, adopted the following | 3 ol 7 i i B | Beti Aairion” davn. by the sl | over it and of people in the shops, stores | ; H ; ) aND | Our play i oor, oue work s done, ..,.'f.";',',..}.'J'J:LL"..‘.I;:::WJF s 'l'};mt:{‘;:u'x::#m,d - 11 ’i‘ FAT A T e set of resolutions at their wmoting on Q\M\\)\“ SPORTING GOODS 'ER. | And Inunrh-‘-nr-; we'li qllkly run, [ by the boys, These were drawn by all |and invalids can ride over it when they | Thursday evening last, anent the death | With cheerful hearts and faces. in turn, and in sections as the work pre over stone pavements. | of their fellow member, M. W. Kennedy, . | S st wih rh g choce, | gl “Completed, they are very per | 3. 1t s an cconomical pvement usre- | ot was recoried i our e of | HAVE the Best Stock in Nebragka, Make Aud sy “iGiood night,” our teacher dear, | fect in outline and "finish. " They | gards the traflic over it, i. ., the saving| ‘o o\ : | ndrews pointing to various parts | culablo advantage. The amountsosaved | WHEREAS, Inexorable death has again h THE BENTON HAIR GROWER THE BENTON HAIR If the roots of the hair are not dead, (and they seldom are) will, in 8o per cent. of the cases of BALDNESS, produce the NEW GROWTH of HAIR, and what will GROW HAIR will STOP its FALLING OUT and PREVENT its turning GREY, because it is all the result of invigorating the roots. DANDRUFF IS CURED BY HEALING THE SCALP. ‘WE WISH THAT ALL PERSONS HAVING DISEASED GROWER IS FOR SALE BY WHOLESALE AND RE-| SCALPS WOULD USE THE HAIR GROWER AS IT; 'SENT BY MAIL, PRICE, $1.00. ADDRESS, WILL CURE MOST CASES. THE BENTON HAIR GROWER C0., Brainard Block, Cleveland, 0. THE THIRD GRADE, | Miss Johnston has fifty-four scholars in | the B and C classes of this grade, | were just in time to listen to the morn- ing exercises, first a rousing negro melody | and then a number of admirable sele | tions declaimed in unison. The pupils stood in lines down the aisles, “‘rows of liquid eyes of laughter,” and recited vividly, intelligently and with excellent gestures, *Old Time Punishment,” *“The Smack in School,’ famine scene in Hiawatha, and Gatibaldi's address to his soldiers. They knew who Garibaldi was and his wife too, as questioning showed. | They had becomo interested in the nob | 0ld son of Italy from a portrait of hin | some copies of The London Graph | tributed by one of the be i | 5 1 full of life and voic their gestures full length and vig | The sobs of “William Willith, if you pleathe,” and the moaning of Hiawatha's | forest were perfect, Miss Cushman has the third A class, numbering fifty-five at present. There lesson in spelling going on in this room, and some pretty tough words at sengers,” “‘oriole,” and “‘menager They also spelled by sound, writing the words on the board and warking out the silent lotter . ) third reader of the Appleton using the words they have had in their lessons. They write model letters on their slates, and make the common of commencing all their epistles with T They write numbers in this grade up to | {one' thousand, and learn to. subtract | where the bottom one is args than the ‘u.p, and learn to multiply where the p | = few words were missed duct is not more than nin Miss T, McCheane has fifty-five schol- We | hich were named without hesitation, rather too nervously and quickly, per- haps. were struck the; and twenty-eight davs to make the voy- around tl ccomplished in eighty days, SOMETHING EVERY LADY OUGHT TO KNOW. There exists a means of se- curing a soft and brilliant Complexion, no matter how oor it may naturally be. fh\gnn‘s Magnolia Balm is a delicate and harmless arti- cle, which instantly removes Freckles, Tan, Redness, Roughness, Eruptions, Vul- gar Flushings, etc., etc. 8o delicate and natural are its effects that its use is not suspeclod hf' anyhody, No lady has the right to present a_ disfigured face in society when the Magnolia Balm is sold by all druggists for 75 cents. All the places in South America with difficult names were pronounced glibly, and when the straits of Magellan had something to say of the early explorer who took three years earth, which can now be | annually would make an income suffi to pay the interest on the cost of pave- fund to redeem the principal. and tear of vehicles is a perpetually re- peated one. 4. It is the cheapest pavement as re- gards motive power. Two horses will, onit, do us much work b blocks, if well laid, or seven if poorly laid, Rudolph Herring, president of the Engineer’s club, of lmfl.dull.lnm is auth- ority for this statement To sum up, in view of all these facts, and in view, also, of the fa available money to be spent in Omaha for ing will go further and afford a larger umber of streets the advantage of a good pavement if expended in laying sheet asphalt on a conerete foundation ment, it would seem that there is no | room” for reasouable people to hesi |tate. As regards Harney and Farnam streets they form no exceptions. The sheet pavement stands in Court street, Boston, wher Wagons re ceive doliver t loads; it is in Kirhy strect in the swue city; it is on Sixth street, Philadelphin, botween Chest nut and Walnut, and on I rth of Columbia road, | Everybody knows of it being on Penn | sylvania avenue, Washington, the princi | pal business street of two hundred thous- and people. In all these places it has Broad streot proven successful after one to ten years use. Gen, M. C. Meigs recommended it for all the streets in Philadelphia. We are therefore quite ready to lay it on Har- ments in any city, and create a sinking In view of this fact it would be wiser to pay cven more for this pavement than stone would cost, for that difference has to be paid | but once, while the difference in wear hauling as heavy loads as five horses will do on stone than if spent in laying any stone pay- | assailed our ranks, n most worthy member of our organization has boen snatehed frot us in the meridian of his cause of humanity and liberty has been called from his work; therefore, Resorven, That while we bow with hum! ubmission to the will of God, who does all things for the best, we can- not help from n-x\;ruuing our sorrow at the irreparable loss sustained through the death of our late brother w. Kennedy, not only by his immediate rel- atives and friends, nor by the E. M. A., of which he was a valued member, but by the entire community. Possessing the noblest qualitios of mind and heart he was always foremost in the ranks of Ivishinen in their efforts to better the condition of their persecuted mother juntry; generous to a fault and ever ly to forgive an enemy or help a friend, although gone from our midst he will ever live in our memory as a man worthy of emulation, and entitled to es- respect and veneration, Resorven, That we tender to the | stricken mother, wife and relatives our heartfelt sympathy; may they b tained in this, their hour of trial; y their sorrow be at least mitigated by the thought that his life was pure, his con duct exemplary, and his death univer sally regretted by all who knew him Kesonven, That a copy of these re | lutions be sent to the family of the de censed; that they be spread upon the | minutes of the organization, and pub. {lished in the Omaha papers, and oux officers wear a badge. of mourni four meetings following their adoption, S — Dr. Oscar Hoffan, physician and sur, goon, graduate of Bellevue college, N. Y Office No, 1112 Farnam 8t. j7-lm manhood and usefulness, a veteran in the g for| PERKINS & LEAR, FURNITURE, " " s HAND. 1416 Douglas Street. ! W. F. CLARK, WALL PAPER, PAINTER, PAPER HANGER AND DECORATOR, KALSOMINING GLAZING And work of this kind will re 0 ve prompt attention. - OMAHA, NEB. ‘Buggy and Spring Wagon Manufacturer. ol attention paid to Horso Shoeing and Genoral Blacksinithing, 315 Fifteenth stroot betweeon Hamey wrnam. . | CORNER SIXTEENTH AND DOUGLAS, - 'COLD STORA GE FOR BUTTER & EGGS IN LARGE OR SMALL QUANTITIES AT SMALL COST.} &4r Warehouso wnd Refrigerators 801, 808, 805, 807 Howard street Owahs, Neb. | Apply to D. B. BEEMER, Somaissin " """ Jugo-tt