Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 29, 1883, Page 4

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! GREAT SPECULATORS AT LUNCH. Dick Hall, W. E. Copeland, W. A. L. |f d i the; ouldn's i THE OMAHA BEE. e CROWTH OF SCHOOLS. | Giok Tt 00 & e Spechs ienry | g shero was s fom i i o™ H. WESTERMANN & CO, Gould, Sage, Connor, Frerd and Oth- Livesey and Dr. A. A, Parker, 'all work- | The bridge is now admirably policed, i | ing devotedly and enthusiastically to pro- |and every few paces there in posted & IMPORTERS OF ers at Their Midday Meal. Twenty Thonsand Annual InCrease il | mce Gmahas educational facilitien blue-coated guardian. During the heat . p /HILDRENN MINDS, |of the day travel is usually light, but v .00 | New York Times "]3 Nl]lIlhBl' 0[ Neb]‘am Whil v“:',""?h::(_,::;:”“r the oty about 6 o'clock the stream begins to in- A man with his mouth full of apple pie « the re‘: :::u‘:z‘fi o of this psper made|CTOMe and does not slack until about A geltli‘culn':d wildly on the floor of the Children, b o ll:mm]" inveatigations in . the | 9:30- / stock exchange the other afternoon when il i - . =:.Ivo:|-'m 1.00 | One Month.... % | business was at its height. A broker who primary departments, particularly at the - THE DAILY BEE.---OMAHA, FRIDAY JUNE 29, 1883. 608 WASHINGTON “AVENUE AND 609 ST. STREET. (- " ker Who | o 1 ittle Study In Experimental Py | Central school, as to the amount of gen. | T e o o Yoo vaurclogger with ple : 7| aral information possessed by the little |G & g prooyri Y S ogeneikl Howl i e It sints chology as made by Our ones, not with the idea of depreciating fRn " chlna, d G e o o W "itorla | vicinity was stopped by his alarming Reporter. the instruction afforded by their teachers 3 an Ia‘ss’ Bam actions, As soon as he could clear his i ; . PURINRSS LRTTRRA. surcharged throat he found his veice ) s : : In May, 1873, ten years 0, ther All Business Lottors and Remittances should be |and began selling right and left in one Y d ! bac b b fhns eriteital sh yhdromed o Tun Bes omaniing Coutaxt, QU | Jino of stock. He was taking his Junch | were thirty-thres teachers in our public %988 to the notions entertained by chil i b S order of ihe comupany. with one eye on the ticker and the other | schools, and their aalaries for that month :‘,}",',":"u‘,’,ffx';“fi,',{‘,"‘,',’,','j:i:, N g tome THE BEE BUBLISHING C0,, PROPS, |9 the pie, when somo figures that were | amounted to 82,924, the pay-roll for the |ly in Boston. Dr. G. Stanley Hall has St. Louis, Mo. motam own on the tape caused him to ; , 4 . Sta ! = E. ROSEWATER, Editor. orget his check and .[,..). out of the res- | Year being 826,000, In May, 1883, there | made some very painstaking experiments il -W- O S - _J M“rgnm like a madman. He was on the | were eighty-six regular teachers, or nine- i::-}:::t r":,“:z}:‘;,:’:;:z::::‘iv’;;:: 'c‘fnplu(lf o N H LE _A. E A PRINTER'S STRIKE, :hzz:im:l:o:(u the market, and saw a tyrfuur incldding substitutes. Their sal- | gio o™ "o a reasoning electric light,” he THE GREAT At Beven o'clock last evening all th |~ When he had put himselt in a position | i for that month were 80,215, (the |says, “‘might honestly doubt the exist- AN RE compositors employed in the offices of the | to feel that ho waa on the safe sido of the pay being 870 a month where it was 875), | ence of such things as shadows, because, i ¢ fence he went back to the restaurant, ate |and the total pay-roll for the last school | P um they are al-| EVOER P.AIN. Omaha dailies deserted their casos to go | nother pioce of pie, gave ' the waiter a |yearamounts to 852,000, Ten years ago | v RAATHN clts cusungaly, tal to sesog: Neuralg:a, Sciatica, on a genoral strike for higher wagos, [ quarter, and told him to say his prayers | the achool census of children between five | nize sides of ‘tHefr own children's sols e el S WAL, L4 Hayingno previous noticelof thefintend- | whon he was long o & declining market, |14 twenty-one numbered 3,721; the | Wwhich can be seen only by strategy.” W Wites, 4 : ] " d 1. | Among city girls, he found that 18 per L a Then he bought a ‘put, light a cigar, | census taken last April shows 8,021 chil- ¥ gy ed strike, wo werenot preparec to supply | Y+ half an hour blew big rings of |dren in the city, *‘Of thess, about four | Get, eI ignorant of what a cow is, snd the vacant places last night. We there- 4 e i el 9 o1 i THE ol . 9 . sk up to coling. Ho amilled utovery | housand aro in our public schools. The |bge C0 " o0 ¢ 1o (e e e idliotu SAMLC. D AVIS & CO fore beg our patrons to be indulgent for Zg?n:h(;“cam‘ch i the market W% | firat of April, Secretary Conoyer informs| No such lamentablo ignorance as this| DUFRENE & MENDELSSOHN, * a few days until our printers force is re- # cab,. and in the uvt;ning informed his | u8, there were 827,000 in bonds in the | W88 discovered in the sur 'e)y of the Omaha : : ; ¢ th & : schools, nor was it expected that there ; / y i, o e e st v v 08 it S gty it | iy o v v, e | 0 T CVET TR QIS | Washington Avenue and Eith Strct, - - - ST. Louts, wo, In the meantime we will endeavor to iy re oy it tho MOrHINg. en | High School, and $16,000 cash to invest, | familiar with natural objects than Boston furniah our readery a aynopss of the moet | broker can andly et hin Tunch - He-haa | PFObObly i paving bonda of the city of | shildren. A ltle girl {rom, Boston who Es. 4 REMOVED TO OMAHA NATIONAL BANK " had recently come to Omaha possessed, | UILDING. x to take advantage of a lull, and while he | Omaha. parous 50 et ik LTl v " R important local and general news. is out things may start out again. He| This isa splendid exhibit. Nothing f‘n‘; o Sy c‘};‘fi‘,’,:,',‘u‘,‘};",v",f“:"“‘:, Ihe Nebraska National Bank o Bex Boriex’s Harvard speech will !;":;" ';iw close ";:?W" on the tw,ke:. ;!\d reveals more vividly the astonishihg [the general information. All the Omaha o o rank as one of the greatest efforts of his |} 1o "6\ woe B0 LR WOY OF BERIER M| growth of our city than the school cen- [ children who were asked knew not only OF OMAHA, NEB. life. dle of it tc h0 baiielbior thk sus. Mr. Test, the Union Pacific statis- | What cows were, but how butter was gire EXCLOBIVR saee of ont ot S5 ot Aro e packs e Bave opomed & Brasch sk Lous o arenns 2 i to pecteot HIBRIL s, R S bers that | a4, They located their ribs correctly | Patd Up capttal - . - $200,000 | Omaha Wrie for Prices. Addresseither T Tho o et ot.atitas Voskh 1 y RN BN (M OSY in every instance, but in all the primary | Surplus Fand, May 1, 1883 [ 15,000 VALENTINE ¢« REPPY, GENERAL CROOK is on his way to Wash- i l"’!( B*;, ‘}:l::fl Jl" (‘:‘mld "L k'"fi h’%‘ we have a population of over fifty thou- | grades ‘insisted that they had only two DIRECTORS: m19m&e-6m Salem or Omaha, Neb. ington 10 teach the cabinet something |Junch at his office 'Y,“ Broadway. and | *nd; which is probably so. Nebraska's | ribs, one on each side. * Not until the A y about managing the Indians. sometimes in tho offico in the Western | best crop is it children; the rain, drouth | fourth e s | A . TOUZALIN, Ve Froient of Boton. STEELE JOENSON & co ] 9 p0eive i A. E. TOUZALIN, Vice President, of Boston. Union building, ot ono_or half.past ono | or grashoppors do not affect that., The | forrect xeply, rocetved, excopt fn one & § NG 0 g S e, e o'clock. It is always light. It consists | state superintendent of public instruc- | N ™"l b e 00 “eaid that there | JOHN S. COLLINS, of G. H. & J. 8. Collins. Tuw president has approved the Was- of consomme or some other light soup, | tion, W. ‘W. Jones, informs us that the 4 1 ! < r Wie ' twi TS T J. M. WOOLWORTH, Counsollor & Attorney at Law. son sentence of dismissal from Tthe army | toast fruit, and tes. When in consulta- | increase of children during the past year | g}, ..., i: nulliv: 0::‘1; n:u;?ji,:)n ulitiu thvj‘ :lcd- it Ll LAy . ” ) 7 tion with a number of gentlemen Mr, |is twenty thousand. As rapidly asschools rtot's i (i‘tl ¢ by the time he reached | - W- Yates, Cashier, for many yoars Cashier of the H and eighteen moaths inthe penitentiary. | Gould orders a more extensive apread, | can be put up they are filled, and the ery {’I" t e :i““ l"‘} bic i) : o ‘;l:l‘c *| First National Bank of Omaha. This in & severe blow to poker playing in|but he never eats heartily himself. |is, *‘Still they come—more room!” When | coq q'pi E10a° (8 G0N oG PRC | - Mhia bank openad for business April 27, 1552, the army. His breakfasts and dinners are | the schools commence work next fall the { i:t) ..C(,:chud s ©eN | 178 DIRECTORS AND STOCKHOLDERS are . AND JOBBERS IN sent from Delmonico’s, and l\lp;!l'illu)!:dul;t exp;m fi‘hntdth;m h'lI‘Iil be | THOHY “uo‘n'n s ‘nm:m( lhxe |uu1:nwsm:: men l\):l m:..h-, -:: ‘(l:a : ; B R VA gk the i 1o less than forty-five hundred children " R, Jusiness is condue with especial reference e PAVING AGAIN, t}:; y;rfit:z:;h,n:};:mem.umd‘kfc):ifl? in them, The West and South schools| The theories held by the youngsters | best and increasing interestsof itsmercantile patrons. PLUUR; SALT, SUGARS, CANNED GUUIL “D ALL GRQGERS SUPPL[ES. Tni if mas time. Washington E. Connor, Mr. | are to be enlarged, $2,000 to be expend- concerning the heavenly bodies revealed, | COLLECTIONS ' receive prompt sttention and m’u:e Union Pacif a:rgan”;omeslw tfhe Gould/Wdaciciot anll rakkgas, takey oof: | od on the Contoal "sohool and tw mow | better than anything ‘else, the peculinr weat obtainable here or elsewhere. A FULL LINE OF THE BEST BRANDS OF ak dnos ote with ‘another "ples for | o o whatever . sulte.. kis fancy. | brick buildings erected, one at the workings of the infant mind. Quite a allowed on time deposits upon favor- Colorado sand stone, and attacks theposi- | g, quite fond of game. He eats and | corner of Seventeenth and Leavenworth | Bumber thought that the sun was “‘fire,” e s Lo i . L Ky tion and assails the motives of this paper | transacts business at the same time,[and the other at King and Dela- ‘l“ifi 'I“':lfl("e".d a reply asan astronomer| FOREIGN EXCHANGE, Government Bonds and CIg&l‘ ] aind Manufactured TOba:CCO. in i i but many thought it was | County and City Securities bought and sold. its i iob which the | Russell Sage, the money-lender, and the [ ware streets, or about midway between | 0% 8 y it b o N in e opparition to the Job Whieh e | persio in puia wad call,in s won. | the North achol and. Prospect Hill eme | made of clouds, o of gold, and that the J. E. BERGEN AGENTS FOR BENWOOD NAILS AND LAFLIN & RAND POWDER CO. railroad officials are attempting 010 erfully modest mari in eating. He will | etery. These twin structures are hand- | Maon Wea a man s face in the sky. Three i U _————— down the throats of thepeople of Omaha. | ;o1 o™ (omfortable meal of & five-cent |somer than any of the present eight room still held to the opinion that the moon M : o o i STAPLE AND FANCY Tast woek we were told that Tk Bew | sandwich and a couple of red apples, | buildings, omamented with terr cotta | % mide of groen cheose, and one little) . = s J. A. WAKEFIELD, was bought by the asphalt contractors, |costing seven cents in all. He|and cut stone, though they are limited in | €07 .T:‘-l 7, A =3 !d g fi Fo “‘"l‘ G i G TR IL8 b a0 it i mever risks ruining s digestion by |cost to 332,000, The steam heating ap-| Bockingh they wid, came from Ftho roceries H Our citizens are now informed that the 5. L y i) d b ils store,” from Santa Claus, from Califor- Jasper stone company has purchased the | 248 in & hurry. Homay be all the | paratus will cost 81,200, and outbuild. g g 4 i lviiiing owed they Cor. Sixteenth and Cuming Str fte dev his sandwich and ap- | ings 8700, for each building. Dufrene nla, but close questiuiiiig Y assistance of the editor of this paper, ':,1‘,;“("();:;‘;;::,’;‘::11;:‘ rm X::gn u:;,:.u: I,]:pm mn!f! Mendelssohn, the mfiiwcu, have | #ll knew pretty ‘w““ how stockings were This would be. amusing if it were not | of oysters or a braco of chops, with o bot- paid particular attention_to the ventila- | made. ' The word “holiday" was the childish. The course of Tre BEk on the | tie of beer if his digestion has been help- | tion, there being six windows to the Uapdithd “;“"13 Al "l(;“‘;“‘l"v“ en 14“3 Sl sl i od by satisfactory returns from his puts |south rooms and eight windows in the | meaning of the first half of the word was paving question has been strictly con- A P SApI asked. One thought that it had some- " and calls. Mr. ‘Sage is always said to|north rooms,so that by a projection they | v 5 1e LAVERD, S8 ! % sistent for nearly a year. In and out of | ghow his respect for the rules of etiquette | have a south exposure Each room is - "'.‘gw:l’ (nnz ‘“.fl “;:’ li'Y’,v, '";l‘". ot 1‘;’ this paper its editor has' advocated gran- | by stufing himself far beyond his ordi-|20.4 by 32.8 feet. ~The reof is high|tEAE B W TR0 Yy GROBCr, I ite block pavements for heavily traveled | nary capacity when at a public dinner or gibclw«l and slated to prevent leakage. "’l?' (‘ "lt‘;“’l" m .“'t‘e- i) ourth asked out to dine or lunch with other | No room is wasted, cross halls are done |gfce A [o corriel gRswer came, & the his d halt for th i e holy day, ginally. The definiti B o 1 YO | gentlemen. His strict adherence, as far | away with, and two flights of stairs six | SAO¥ G SEERAOY, 08 SO O maindor of tho city on lavel troota,. For | ¥ omibic, o plui Living, has o Ao | 96t wido lead o he socond tory. [0F its, ke included, *“Because woldiers the hills we have urged either cedar | contributed to his remarkable vigor and | SUPERINTENDENT JAMES s, TS Bt Aokt Santly block or well.laid macadam. The at-|good health, He is very wealthy, but he |i8 & broad-minded educator whose nten- | 8T4Ves: | 2. PU ‘?1‘;”1"" "“‘T‘“‘“.‘ thee i iumltmined from high Jiviug, which |tion it is to give the schools of Omaha a | WMAMaA 8 graves. . ecause the chil- v tempt to convinee the public that Tur v W L f TR Aok i |dren were too tired to come to school. ; ¥ ¥ g% means the ruin of a constitution, no mat- | reputation, and this he is doing by main- “Bees it wag hot.” ‘‘Because th Bex has any .P“l"'“l “""‘}‘“’v in any| torhow strong, Few men of Mr. Sage's | taining modern ideas in teaching and “:]L"““r"‘:m:w d“t’.( “":" iy “'“,‘,""Th‘." paving material or paving job will fail |age are so well preserved as he. Cyrus | arousing in his little army of teachers an il capital 0 g0 somewhere, 18 M -to Oil sto | . i w Field lunches at the Down Town |enthusiasm heretofore unknown. The |8t 18 capital 5 onivor ve! nfies csignally as the . attempt. of MRS e T 01 s iy | public schools nover appeared so earnest. | - Being asked to namo right and wrong e i the editor of the Republican to ;' okl "‘w "“i{' . ot, “" u(f.hYN 5 wide awake. In an extended conver. |8¢ts, there was a noticcable divergence| ~The only OIL STOVE that will burn convince our citizens that the U, P. op. |n menl He i active, and blessed | Iyt B R tendent yesterday, | between the replies of the girls nd. tho |all grades of kerosene with “ABSOLUTE with good digestion. James R. Keene, | sation with the superintendent yesterday, | | aléo b ) SAFETY.” Send for descriptive circu- . gan is not hand and glove inith the Un- | the lending bear, takes his meals ab Dol | the writer of these articles was surprised | oy 28 also hotwaen the responses of the | PRSP, 0 Couerf Fo S « ion Pacific sandstono ring, who are try- | monico's Broad street establishment, He | to learn thmt teachers are paid better f;"t 5";1" :1“4'2:1 ")3 St ‘?3",‘1' AL .tl"’ J s ing to swindlo Omaha with o choap John | ETatfis hia appetito and eata everything alariosin Omuha than in any place be-| E8t 008 (e bils bav B s vt/ | MILTON ROGERS & SONS, | its hi i i n nver, r (i RIS (AREL SERANNS, 2 unfit even for curbing and guttering. drinks & small bottle of champagne. ception of Chicagn, better salaries than |y0 “8tedl,” —runaway,” and “swear. | pppoda7S ROR LIGHTING THE But whatever the personal preforences e in'any plaso botwoen New York and Lt T S W CITY OF OMAHA, ‘ : : o y 5 h acl 1 g i i opos e ¢ office of of the editor of this paper, he insists| ~CUBIOSITIES AT AUCTION. | Penver. I g:;lus,yf.:fwml e Mj;: of the baby,” and naughty to “‘talk in | Sesled propusals will o receiyed at theoffce ot the | I o il i o "o » p 2 M., for lighting that the will of the, peoplo shall govern |y g oo e e i o and botter work s tho result. Thay |"chool,” “throw stones,” or ‘make ihd ity of Omaba by fth dlectric Tights, Lmber, Lah, Shingles, Piekes, SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS, LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, &C- STATE AGENT FOR MILWAUKEE CEMENT COMPANY. Near Union Pacific Depot, - 3 - OMAHA, NEB, C. F. GOODMAN, Wholesale Druggist! AND DEALER IN Paints, Oils, Varnishes and Window Glass, OMAHA, NEBRASKA. o e = . M 4 ‘'l 3 : v ise.” e f not less than 2,000 . The location of | the action of their . chosen|" ' Lupge and Whatwas a Cost- | have been in this way instructed in_the | mothernervous by noise.” | Tn the second | L 08, GOt G R iy ol S noMUSIC DEALERS R4 representatives in the city council. Iy R it method of teaching primary scholars to|8'aCe the religious idea seemed to COme | jights shall burn from twilight every night to 12 —_ % P y read by sound, a method of which many l.u the front. The boys liked to go to | o'lock midnight. Said proposals to be for a term of OMAHA, NEB. ty owners in five paving districts have Thirty vossels belonging to & navy that | its practical results has boen found so far the poor;” the girls to “‘get tickets at lighting tho streets of Omaha with, gus, with not lew THE " hy bt i i 5 foot. . 8 ol - petitioned for sheet asphaltum aud have | iy the wonder of the world are to be sold | Superior to the old A B C method, that ::::lek}:a :chfilffl):“t‘]l‘:"fi?::&d‘a““ ‘bhm; Tight 60 19,0 ook radlght every night,und alsd pro- 2 NINE LEADERS ! protested against the snap game action of by Chandler to the junk dealers who | the latter is no longer used. The board | {PICKECEA, BT BIAY TLe Abe Viiote | ok igbi bo bumanty ekt ium tingin 0 | OLDEST WHOLESALR % BRIATL tho board of public works, in. endeavor- | shall bid highest for them. Eighteen of | Will probably employ some special teach-| {0 | TWESD, 83 10 BA0 O |G e and e Soare: : IMPORTANT TO BUYERS OF ing to force upon them a ;nnhripl which the thirty are steam war-ships, | ™ next year, one in music, one in elo- L ), play The city reserves the right to reject any and all JEWELRY HousE ¢ I i " Ay d sister. The boys thought it bad to | bids. : i 4 * | cution and one for drawing and writing | 80 i Yy - they havo once rejected and to which | Sde " Tieme. sighiien” s mura|i all grades. Good renults cannot be R ok it iohas fmana for | e Tl e e B e iy IN OMAHA. they earnestly object, These property |cost the country more than a million |Oltained without them. Miss Harden- gir;";:) “:eu fibs,” “r““e?: the ::;get"z Ohanna fon the tostt :'-fia:’:.::' T e Visito here find all th 1ti 1+~ owners represent & street frontage that | dollars apiece, on the average. We have burgh has been teaching elocution four | 8F ‘get mad at sisters.” * | Jemaw - J.3.L C.JEWETT, City Clerk, [ " i5100T can hiero fin AL LT " will require 16,000 yards of ‘paving. 1In taken the trouble to complote, as exactly Houre.a" wedk In the Tigh achool, and In the third grade much the same re- | Matter of Application of J. E. Blae, for Liquor n K5t oot 4 as possible, from the official reports, the | there is talk of ten or twelve hours a0 L8 LOHSETCE My 0 B0 TR0 License. Out of the many hundred manufac- tionthe city will bo called upon 0| ayount that has been spent on each, for | Week. Superintendent James is strongly |{ e the yard,” ‘‘chop wood, 4 and the NOTICE. Bn‘vnnwmr GLOOKS, turers of this line of goods, we lay claim pay for 3,000 yards at the alley intersec- | construction, repairs and equipment, |VPPosed to corporal punishment in the| -9 "l g“fin'g old ‘enough’ 1o *make | ;N okice o hersty given that J. E Blake did upon to representing the leading makers, and I .- tions on Eleyenth, Twelfth, Thirteenth, :‘:el;;i“ve r:{ um oe.‘"h:h Iulllfltflllfll :vtl]\‘:“g:nx ?:B?E:I‘;m: '.ch"' o(“,]‘. d::‘rh:: gl:d.," “‘wash windows,” and *‘milk the o O A T et fo s RICH AND STYLISH JEWELRY, can ngmw a more complete and larger line . 'y { L b 1 t i ) spil d i [ “at No. 214 8. i 5 Fourionth sod Fiteanth strets, |10 iguree do notover ol the st In| UGG 1y [0 R Emn 80 o O oy remasked it wanowrong | Bl i o, R S0 BEK | e i, and Choiose |21 Da00s and Orsan than can be found ¥ If all the % of it 0 y to pull up ma's flowers,” and the girls | the 11th day of July, 183, to the 11th day of Octo- J . yrid in ane ouse in the west. Our i vost of our citizens |, d the pil there will be less next year. A d : e N » 't Selections in i ARy . an o pillage. h said it was not right to ‘‘break dishes,” | ber, 1883. If there be no objection, remonatrance or NINE LEADERS are the following well- 1 with the exception of 'the ' 'property o Veasel, A suggestion to connect the schools - M " | protest filed within two weeks from June 28th, A. D. k d celeb Py i 0 Cost. 3 Cost. 5 . and “break slate pencils.” By the time | {§gs. the said license will be granted. nown and celebrated instruments. owners . on theso . stroots . were #1,470,028 Tuscarors 81,310,010 | tho suporintandent's offce by tole | [\ oy the fourth grado the answers | 3 B, Applicut. | FTTecloum Stomes . |grpiNwAy PIANOS s Florida, 701 [Nurrag’ 677 | p! of 3 )y % 5 insist that the provision of the char- | Congress. ... 1,406,779Saco . JOL1,107 | the superintendent of achools in Wil.| Step softly, . c.os0 € e ey AR e 108 3 ter which vests the choice of paving ma- Woekester, }‘w‘l,:m;;:‘g_‘:’,:;“ g&“:m liams' block, - and in each of the four ;‘t‘"i‘f‘;pm:'l"ghk:&p?,‘““&y';‘;;.‘.‘gg; Eraesen 3. 3. 1. o, sewerr, ey, |IFINE WA TCHE s, ‘0?};‘; Isl]‘z q’?i’NOS b . s 2 | principal buildings, central, north, east || o) ) : P 4 o terial in the owners of abutting property A 1,%},;‘;}‘ }';Nlh:k. fix;,m !m ot ishin ‘pert;” one said it was & right act to “lift | Matter of .\ppllmhm'?I Frank Kasper for Liquor ARION PIANOS. f " necin N oanol o y board . " License. AT AS LOW PRI v i shoukd bo respected by the city council. | Wyomiug.'. 1,28,162{Dictator. . 1,64881 | moro than’ twenty-five dollars a month, |YOUrhat to a gitl when you see her,” and NOTICE. ; K s T SCHONINGER CYMBELLA ORGANS, g. mén whohpq nvulmh- ;1. e [ S N 53| 3d would save tenchers and principals 3';2,. or 'to pick up ‘thing that girls Notioo 4 Nerchy given that Frank Kaspor did | A8 is compatible with honorable dealers. CI;’}%?&EX%; (\‘v]z\fic;%;g ORGANS, paving ought certainly to have some- 2 FERERIAIRE) 1, i 4 "= | andsuperintendent anyamountof walking . O e R T N e B e T NG IAL ORGANS, thing to say a8 to the manner in which | . Twenty millions linvested in this old |and annoyance, particularly at the com- e Ain D el i e w T Siuen. 4 Qullimadppe loys sleganynow; plose, We want everybody desiring @ Piano. their tatkiog4s 63 bb Sxpehdel junk! . E mencement of the terms and examination Y h T By Yais s she- 1ith day of Octooets Tower Building, or Organ to call or write to us for infor- ! We have already called attention to|time. The smaller schools could send to ARy 1883, "It Shore be. no'objection, ‘remonstrance of - . mation and GET POSTED. We can sel} But for our gitizons generally, the Bk | o the case of the Alaska, which was|the nearest large building to communi- | Thirty-four Thousand Pennies Taken | protest fled within two weoks from June 20th, A. D. CORNER 11TH AND FARNAM STS. | 000" " best instrument made for the protests against the Colorado sandstone | classed one year ago by Secretary Chand- | cate with other buildings or the superin-| on the Brooklyn Bridge Sunday | 188, the said license willbo gragtet, |\ o 22 S R cast money, if you will give us a trial scheme because on its face it is a|ler a8 eflicient in oevery respect|tendent. Business between the schools ot The Omaha Bee newspaper will publish the above and want to buy. All we ask is to show i mscally job 4o plunder tho ity | 207t ordnance, and which he now pro- in constautly being transactad by the | o vork jouma, i :;;";;‘,":EP;;,':,"*T‘;,!"{;,;“.,‘;‘*:’,.,L‘,.‘,‘fl‘;;:‘:,“.,‘: MAX MEYER & BRO., |you, as wo know we can satisfy everybody A P ut under the hammer as unfit | slow means of messengers, and annoying | In spite of the heat yesterday, very d T oA from our Nine Leaders, which g troasury, defy the wishes of our citizens | bor - further naval servoe. A certain | mistakes ocour, The schools ‘at Akron, | large crowds sought the bridge. Bo.| Sstiewk .. L C. JEWETT, City Clerk, MANUFACTURERS OF nited by thote Roated asiChRIbaa o tae. and property owners and defeat the pro- {}‘Illns:d“.l"‘“:sd mfmuou-—f pre‘:lx:cauur ‘nllf (;hiu, are u-uvidled with u‘luph';:nlel,l and | tween 8 ufl,loclfihao:).hu morning and : in | Matter of Application of Chas. Fleck for, Liquor Send for catalogue and price list, ® . t visions of the city charter made in the or s & way of sending costly | they greatly facilitate work. Telephone | the afternoon pennies were taken License. A sl hyndiar il yossel to the yurds and junk-shops of | connection with our public schools would |in on the New ' York sidownd aboutaa| o NomOE SHOW CASES! MAX MEYER & BRO, , g v i Vi i N v | “No iven that C) Fleck did upon V. We warn the ity council against lond- | it printed above, the sale will includs | speeialy 11 S ek whon they are solui: | maaand mmagacly, and by mupset - ans | (e i dniSute L DS MR BT | eonhand | Con, 11th & Farnam Sts., Omaha ing themselves to this bold-facod attempt | several old sailingships and a fow tugs and | ous regarding the safety of their children, | tra ticket gates had to be opened. ell “malt, piritions and. vinou liquors a¢ Eagle | 60 800K & WaYS on hand. d N 2 - to override public sentiment. No coun- tl.\llllmr‘:“ l.The l;ll:r'lulplln;n l!(amnl A rapid and easily made inquiry on a| “Yes," said one of the bridge police, | Houwe Fourteenth street, Third ward, Omata, Neb cilman ean afford to place himself in de- [8ives the history of the Burlington, |stormy day often saves great anxiety. “‘this has been a heavy day for foot pas- | October, 1853 It there be no objection, remon- Sariad 4o tho ok ¥ d which is now at League island, awaiting| The text books w in our schools | sengers. The most curious thing in the | strance ‘or protest flled within two woeks lro-{.xnme o wishes of our citizens and | the auctioneer. The Burlington vas an|seem to be all up to date .xoept the | Sunday crowds is the number of China. | * A D- 1883, tho said license wibbo cranteds THE FRO NT property owners, We do not believe | old ferry boat, once used by the Camden g\-uglmxhi«u. Where so much better | men. They go backwards and forwards [ The Omaha Bee newspaper will publish the above that & majority of the council will make |& Amboy railroad company. ~ Secor | manuals are published and so much more |in groups of from two and three to as | 1otk once sach week for tuo weeks t the sxpene { the dangerous attempt, The consumma- Robeson bought her of his g artistic, it is & pity that the old book | many as ten or adozen. I've been watch- | cn herewith. > bt b > tion of sucha job z’) .. | neighbors, Dialogue and Wood, of Cam-|ghould remain. {n the primary geo-|ing them all day, and Idon't think it lewk J. J. L. C. JEWETT, ¢ ‘ . such a_job at the very beginning | den, paying $40,000 of government |graphy Nobraska is given seven lines of [much of an exaggeration to say that ] of puflr;‘yorkl in Omaha would be a &unsy.d dmu he u'?(]:onde;l several | reading matter, and one of these declares | thousands of them have L'll'llee(l. 1 sup- § serious drawback toa further prosceution | thousand dollars in ing her out to| gtoek-raising our principal occupation, | pose curiosity attracts them, and yet of i i i infly- | €onvey material from the old| totally ignoring corn and wheat. The|they don’t appear to motice anything| Ioveimm th obs Wiy, Whose iAW DI o d WP e’ Tand, | Hor| elogant hook kuown A Bevinto n'sgrame| they svs, bt Just walk solemuly and | 3 gnoe will be felt for years to come to our | total cost has boen 47,646, 1t is esti- | war school goography, gives Nebruak ST o0 L We Baie, b good many 7 otriment, mated that she made three trips before | sov Rh piotur - pri fer come 4 g 0 s before | sovoral pages, with pictures of our prin- | other foreigners too, who come in_ga | —— she was permanently tied up at the cities and a large map of the stato |from Castle Garden. Italians and G i Biaia it ooan it Leagus island. b drip, | b prebraiialy St children | mans generally, and also a great niny | ¥ therefore, cost the government just $10,- | aro taught the counties, and it is & useful y-warsmen,” 1s dasigned to meet the wants of those |882. Wo suppose this is the highest| thing to know in & state where ne Do you have much trouble with the ¢ who need a medicine to build thein up, | rate for forry transportation ever paid by | references are made by counties. ru\ubfl"’ i s give them an appetite, purify their blood | any government. is from Adams county,” is as often heard | *Not a bit; they keep moving now ryed therewith. and oil up the machinery of their bodies, | Everybody will watch with intevest the | here as “He is from Hastin, The | almost of their own accord, and it's only S0t ewk 9. d" L. C. JEWETT, City Clerk. No other article takes hold of the system E:;gmu of this great sale of Robesonian | board of education had best consider this. | when some foreigners who don’t under- and hita exastly the apot like Hood's|brica-brus and”frwud-rusted antinui-| The bourd was never. mr finel organ: | stand Tnglish want to stop and look 1| JOHN G.JACOBS, . Barsaparilla. Tt works awic reach- ized or the committees more wisely made | the view that we have a little trouble in Formerly Gish & Jscobs a mpn of thebuman body through T ———" up. The old members are E. K. Long, making them move on. They tell me all i Grass-Cloth Coats. ide i 3. P i S 3 D Voot givingto ll revcwed W | G Ooh ot | prsdentfon th thind e . . Pt |t paople vl on e bridgs o vless | UNDERTAKER. (8t Paul Harvester and Appleby (Binder. <

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