Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 17, 1883, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

———— «ties, and we antl TUTT'S MY g T LT PILLS TORPID BOWELS, DISORDERED LIVER, and MALARIA, From these 8ources arise thic o discWscs of the human race. These Symplowms indicate thelrexistence : Loss of petite, Bowels costive, § ullness after eotin, ne of temper, Low having neglected somo duty, Dizziness, Fluttering at the Heart, Dots before the e es, highly cole ored Urine. CONSTIPATION, and do. mand the use of a remedy that acts dircotly ontho Liver, AsaLivermedicine TUTT'S PILLS 1iave no oqual. Their actionon the Kidnoys and Skin i8 al5o prompt; romoving all impuritics through these three * scave engers of the system," producing Appe. tito, sonnd digostion, rekulir 8001, & OGN skin anda vigorousbody. TUTT'S PILLS 1sea of griping nor interfero ith daily work and are a perfeot TIDOTE TO MALARIA o, Offive, 44 Marry TUTT'S HAIR DYE, GRAY HAIR OR WHISKERS clianged ine stantly to n GLOSSY BLACK by asinglo ap- plication of this Dye. Sold by Druggists, 088 on reccipt of § ity 4 0 Stroot, New York, TUTT'S MANUAL OF USEFUL RECEIPTS Ff". | The, Only Perfect substitute i | Milk.The most nourishing diot 1 nursing mothers. € Kevps i all climates, Send for the pamphlet. g & me-tusth 28t 41 Central Whart, Bostor Mother's and | on Sold 1y Hostef %, Bittors n s Stomach 4t 14 the re [Pt § quirements of the ra- | tional medical philos. ophy which at_ pres. ent prevails. 1t is o perfectly pure vege tableremedy,cmbrac. | ing the hree pr = ties of apre or- iro by ers I ¥ STOMAC! B Ily mifm&e-eoddw For You, Madam, Whose Complexion betrays some humiliating imperfec- tion, whose mirror tells you that you are Tanned, Sallow and “disfigured in "counte- nance, or_have Eruptions, Redness, Roughness or un- wholesome tints of Com[i}ex- ion, we say use Hagan’s Mag- nolia Balm, It is a delicato, harmless and delightful article, pro- ducing the most natural and entrancing tints, the artifici- ality of which_mno observer can detect, and which soon becomes permanent if the Mn%nolin alm is judiciously us The Public 1 requested carefully to notice the new and enlarged Scheme to be drawon Monthly, £ OAPITAL PRIZE, $75,000, Tickets Only -$5, Shares in Proportion. | Lonisiana State Lottery Company “We do hereby certify that we supervise the ar- rangements for all the Monthly and Semi-Annuat Drawinys of the Louiviana State Lottery Company, -add in perion manage and control the Drawinys | Ehomaelocs, and that the same are conducted . with | Ronesty, fairanss. and in good faith toward all par ¢ the compuny to use this cer. our signatures attached tificate, with fac-similes of an its advertisements " CoMMIBSIONHRS. Incorporated in 1868 for 25 years by the legislature tor ducational and charitablo purposes—with a cap- iital of $1,000,000—to which o reserve fund of over 50,000 has since been added. y an overwhelming popular vote its franchise was made a part of the present state constitution adopted December 2, A, ). 1879, The only Lottcry ever voted on and endorsed by | & people of any state 1t never Scales or Postpone Its grand single number drawings take place monthly. A_SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY TO WIN A FOR. N rand Dr th tieans, TUESDAY, Drawing. g, Class 1, at New Or- T 14, 1883 19th Monthly CAPITAL PK , #75,000. 100,000 TICKETS at FIVE DOLLARS EACH. tion, in Fifths in Proportion. LT OF PRI s, 1 CAPITAL PRIZE 1 do do 1 do do 2 PRIZES OF $6000 5 do 2000, 10 do 1000, 20 do 500 100 do 200 800 do 50 do 1000 do APPROXINATION PRIZNG, 9 Approximation prizos of §750 9 do do 9 do 1967 Prizes, amounting to. .. Applcation for rates to clubs should oy be made tot New Orle e office of the Company in New For farther information_write clearly giving full | addroas. Send orders by Express, Registered Lotter | or Moncy Order, addressed only to M. A. DAUPHIN, New Orleans, La, ngton, . C. | LSL. LOUISIANA STATE LOTTERY (O B. Frank Moore. 127 La Salle Street. Chicago, (Formerly 819 and 212 Broadway, N. Y.) Now Manager of Chicago Office. To whem apply for Ihformation and ticketa. - 160th Monthly Drawlug, Tuesday, August 14. or M. A, DAUPHIN, 607 Seventh St creature, | wrapped up in the welfare of the man ive John A. McKimmey, of the Tndis |agreed to follow the WIFE NO. 5. fA Groom of Fity and a Bride o ( Fifteen, Frank N. Sem/'s Arrest for Perjury in Falsely Swoaring That His Wife-to-Be WAS of Age, Cincinnati Enquirer THE DAILY BEE~OMARA, TUESDAY JULY 17, 1383. 1 ail from the waist to th 4o vands, a crown was on the hea wnd at the s f the body a kind o t posited. The body 1 en in an excellent state ered with painted hieroglyphics. The discoverer, his trip to Bogot | charcoal, carried all the ornamen 1 him,with the exception of the ¢ wnd scepter. After selling his cl n h mmenced to wander from house t h , inquiring if any one wished to buy some metal, offering to dispose of the whole lot for §4 At last he fell in with | time on just as little £ SIDE BOARDING-HOUSES, arms and ankles wore encircled by Places W Cramped Purse May Find a Chance to Sport {| New York Journal Thero are people who spend 100 or 2500 a week to live at Long Branch, and here are others who have an almost v equal enjoyment of the privileses of the hotels who do it for €6 or v weok ose people do everything in the hotels 1/ except eat and sloep” there, They can set on the pinzzas and listen to the bands, they frequent the bar-rooms and bowling ' | alleys, and altogother have oney would A vory as it For the fifth time Mr. Frank N. Scott | ® gentleman who understood the value of | cost to live in New York. is now enjoying the salubrious pleasures of the honeymoon. Yesterday the happy {groom registered at the Central Police station, and ate his meals off a wooden bench in the iron-bound room assigned him. “Perjury” was the charge under which he was lield, and this crime, it is alle he committed when he obtained from the court the document which gave lima legal right to wed Miss ( i May Pressell, a pretty India maiden. Last Thursday woek Mr arrived here from the Hoosier capital nd took rooms at the Queen City hotel The next day Miss Pressell put in an ap ¥ brought to light the articles, and who at one 810 for them, offering to p somely for the crown and ¢ hun hand ter. sce that it had been plundered during his absence, and that the interesting and valuable relics were gone. It is to be hoped invostigations will be made into the matter, as it is quite probable other bodies may be discovered in the vicinity of the mausoleum thus accidentally — ALLIGATOR LEATHI nee, and in a little more than one | First Tanned as a Curlosity, But after she had joined him they wer Now Used to Make a Multi tied as tight in the matrimonial noose as tude of A Siuire Hayne conld tio them - The ceremony was perf mmlAl at the | Now York Sun Queen City in the presence of Joln Coo Al i large va ks, 1 pory Who liapper brother of the | ges, hand Iy ot articles made girl’s grandmother Tn_the fact that|;fy joculinr mottlod Toather v Scott had sworn Miss I to bo of 1y Cliambers stros show.oass. . A lotig. Jugal nge lay the basis for the prosect Luapmow pioce of the samd kind of leathos tion, whiel® the parents of the young Lride at onee began to wage against him girl wha will not be nincteen year old until the 20th day of February next the new Mrs. Scott is romarkably well doveloped. She is a plamp, handsome and her wholo soul seems whomt she promised to ways honor and obe, It was the first time she had | m such an avowal, but in this the groom went her four times better, and two of four other ladies he once j to cling to until death still among the livin, the smised rted them, are nd enrolled in long line of divorced. One week | yesterday they wero married. From ti the pair proceeded to Hills nd there night before last, Det apolis force arvested Scott, MeKimm isa brother-in.law of Wi, Presscll, the father of the girl, who lives at No 201 | N Liberty street, in Indianapolis. It was the urgent request of | that the detective She left hnlnu‘ without a word of notice, and when it | was discovered that she had sent a tele- gram to Scott apprising him of her com- ing, they became almost distracted. Though nearly ‘“‘sweet sixteen,” young lady has had the pl brating but three b born on the last ds leap year. the bride’s parents the sthdays, for she was y of February durin The groom has scen fifty birthdays. He is not unknown to theat. rical fame, and was for some time press and advertising agentat Brooks & Dixon's | Park theatre in Indianapolis. He seemed to feel the disgrace of being behind the bars most k and all ‘day long his| young wife remained as near his side as | it was possible forher to get. It was the first time that he ever suffered arrest, and it was believed he spoke with truth, During the war he was the captain of au | Eastern regiment. and fought for the Union. In a little frame cottage at No. 132 Linn street there resides a lady who was the fourth wife of the prisoner. Last March she was divorced from him—a re- sult of her own seeking—at. Bedford, Indiana, he not answering the petition she brought to court. A little girl not | quite two years of age, and a baby boy of | seven months are the living fruitsof their union. The lady was Miss EvaJohnson, and to an Enquirer man she releted afow points in the history of her erstwhile hus- band. His first wife he married in Bos- ton & good many years ago. They were divorced, and the lady still lives, she thinks, or at least was living two years | ago, when she and Scott visited Boston | together. | After the severance of this little love | affair, Mr. Scott went to Indianapolis, | and there he married two of the fair x daughters of the town before he met and | loved Miss Johnson, but not, however, | at the same time. The divorec | court was {not called into requisition in cither case, for death robbed him of both | treasures. In December, 1880 he m: ried Miss Johnson, but their life was not one of unalloyed bliss. She lived at her | father's most of the time, and he had a | room at the Park theater. Often when she visited him there she would be sur- prised to find Georgia Pressell there. Then she was a mere child, and not worth the feeling of jealousy. “Why, I have made dresses for that child,” was the remark of Mrs. Scott No. 4, referring to the new acquisition to the Seott houschold, *“She 1s nothing but a mere child,” But the fact is the mere child is ma- tured far beyond her years. The second | thei ried life Scott manag, l} ' company for Gus Froh- | man, of the Madison Square theater com- pany, and last season he was with Jumes O'Neill on his starring tour, while a son of his first wife was one of the advance in the ssme company. The day after Mrs, Scott No. 4 rcceived her i ce she came to this city, and she made her home with her father ever Scott seems diaposed to throw sinc the brunt of this last affair to his bride, | who he says he married to save from disgrace, as she followed him to this | city, The coloring to this story is| doubted, as th 8 trousscau was fur- nished by the happy groom himself. It is possible the charge will not be | pressed in the police court to-c The wirl is now his wife, and the more con He has years, ught her the rudiments of music—for he is a scholar—and these have been mixed with the rudiments of love. Mrs. Eva Johnson Scott, with her babics, lingered about Ninth strect last night to get a glimpse of the father of her children and his new love, — A Crowned Mun Panama § 1y Found. cently discovered at Usme, in the state of Cundsnamarca, but, unfortunately,the good fortune befell an ignorant laborer, whose carelessue of intelli- gence have depriv tific world of an opportunity for research such as is but seldom encountered. Tautiva was rluuiug afield at Usme, in the neighbor- tered a large stone, Out of raised the slab and was awarded for his labor by discoverin, with numerous gold ornaments, the most First Cupital Prize, #75,000. Tickets $. Sold in Withhs at §1 each. See full schome elsewhore. d wedkeut-w bw. important of which was a large collar, The body was covered with a sort of gol- ¥ other Y | of the leathe wsure of cole- |, logical treasure was Te- | hood- of Bogota, when b plow ancoun- | curiosity he | lung over end and ¢ hem. 1t was rounded at one L away to a point at the I T'wo flippers projected from each side of it. he use of alligator skin seés to by inereasing,” the reportor said to the pro- prictor of the show casce, **The increase is astonishing,” he re plied. “Twelve or fifteen years ago al ligator leather was tanned as a curiosity Fow articles were mado of it. About our ye , however, the manufacture of alligator leather bogan in earnest First a fow shoes were made of it, and the manufacturers of such there was something in it. culiarly beautitul leather, goods s It is o pe- Thero are no two skins marked just alike, and it fol- lows that no two artic made of the leather can be alike. The natural color aside from It finishes s attractive, of the marking; ible. It is conceded that and finish it in an- ner superior to the best workmanship of the old country. Here is a pocket-book American alligator skin forms the out- side; American calfskin the lining, Any judge of such goods will say that it is by all odds the handsomest as™ well as the best leather of the kind in existence. ty dollars o dozen for such goods, as they are, is a low price. hile the beauty of alligator leather is its chief characteristic, its durability is of hardly less importance. These ks gator leather will outwear their owners, no matter how youthful. With these two things in its favor, it is no wonder that the sale of alligator leather is iner “How many ators were slaught ered to satisfy the demand last year!” “Not less than half a million.” “How do you get the skins, and where do they come from?” ““Most of them come from Florida and the other Gulf States. shot with rifles, and the negroes have al- (.2} most a monopoly of the business. When an alligator crawls out on the snd for his after- dinner sleep he falls a victim, The negro gets from fifty cents to one dollor apicce for alligators. The hunt is carried on so vigorously that the reptiles are beginning to grow scarce. Laws will have to be enacted to protect them during the breeding season and when young. ““All sizes, from two to eighteen feet in length, are now killed. The choice skin et long. There is as much diffe; ence between the six-foot skin and the cighteen-foot skin as there is between a calf skin and an ox hide. The skins are packed in lime for two months to remove the horny The remaining pro- cess is much like that for any leather. It takes four months to prepare a skin, There is a tannery for alligator skins in Brooklyn.” “Has any one developed an imitation of alligator leather?” ““The ds are using imperfect skins, No lime will soften the horns that have stood the attrition of red hot sand for half & century. Those skins do not wear vell between the scales. There are other imperfections in the skins. The demand for colored goods help us out, how- ever, as the coloring matter covers a mul- titude of imperfection. When you want an alligator leather article of any kind ir | chaose the uncolored goods, pay , and you will get the | well as the handsomest and best. —— BELLES AND BEAUX WHO SWIM, Washington Socicty Excited Over u Recent Innovation, WasuiNeron, July 9.—This summer the swell beau sends delicately perfumed notes to his female friends which contain an invitation to take a swim. The great rink which was used at winter for roller skating has been turned into a natatorium by & young Washingtonian, and he has begun a series of semi-weekly swimming soires, A find band is in attendance and the interior is brilliantly lighted with electric jets. Broad balconies surround the basin, where opera chairs are provid ed for spectators and friends of the swim- mers who do not carc to participate, long either side are closet-like rooms, me room being assigned to the gentlemed and the other to their fair partners, | check being given for ez entering they Upon retire to their servative ones interested avow that it | regpective sides of the hall, and in ten Neb, Plans and specifications to would only cause her pain to separate | minutes appear in gay bathing suits. The | be seen at the office of Dufrene & Mendels them, for it can be easily scen that she | couple mect at the springboard at the | sohn, Architects. is passionately attached to him. His | head of the bath, and away they go with | The right to reject any or all bids, re- 500 [ word is her gospel, and has been for |4 plunge in concert, It is lots of fun they say, and now that it has suddenly grown polite the soirces aned each night to the full capacity of the bath, which 1s about 60 by 300 fect The man who started the rage is the lion of the hour, and nothing else comn the attention of the quality folk who have | nothing to do except amuse themselves with some new thing. —— Shoulder braces for gents and ladies at | Goodman's. i n's, —— | Eggs 16c & dozen at W, Gentle | ~e—- o | Space prevents our giving the full de- | tails of the matter to-day | CLOSING OUT | CLOSING oUT SUMMER GOODS AT BUSHMAN'S, 1t will pay you to see Nun's Veilings, | Buntings, Dross Goods, Silks, Ladies’, a mummy covered | Gentlemen's and Children’s Underwear, | Hosiery, Gloves Our prices are always a8 low as the lowest, and often lower, Seo them at Bushman gave him | - [and will only be displaced by 'he alligators arve | nds | Long Branch is full of boarding 1 many of thom full of the protentio sort, He | kept by landlords who have fashionable | roturned to his house for them, to find | boarding housesin New York in the win. | ter and take a good number of boardors with them. But in the streots | running back to the village of Branch and in Atlanticville, near there are dozens of boarding houses people of modorate means, where hus. | band and wife can live for from 245 to & their Long by ok, and where singlo young men aro | at from 86 to §10. The hoard is not atlluent,but it is as good as the ay wge New York hash he The cooking | is of the usual order. But a short walk | takes the boarder down to Ocean avenue, | and then ho can feel just as proud as the Dest of them, Shoepshead By performs very much the same duty for Coney Island that the village of Long Branch does to what is nerally known as Long Branch by the rich summer visitor. Hero, within a ten minutes’ walk of the Brighton or Man Lattan, ono may find plenty of cott where neat accommodations will he for 810 a week. 1t would bo stre the truth to say that the board in these places was first class or even second class, but it is as good as can_be got for the mony anywhere elso. Tt must be remembered that one | square meal will cost as much the crack hotols as a wholo w and lodzing the Sheepshead boarding houses. Along the main ror too, leading to the island_ many ventur some and speculative landladies try their luck by opening summer boarding-houses. The ventures are usually unsuccessful, | and they retive discomfitted at the end of | aseason. But there are always plenty to | | throw them into the breach the sea son following. They usually fill up with great facility, but what with bad debts and the lowness of prices they do not usually make both ends meet. The sea 1 is short. It begins about July Lst |and ends towards the 20th of August. In | this seven weeks time the profit must be wde, and any level-headed landlady will ce at once that it cannot be made. That is why level-headed la ies do not, as a rule, assumo these risks. Even at Saratoga and Newport the trash exists as an appendage of fashion. | The latter is the most exclusive of all | our watering places, heing really a city of rich residences, but the landlady cannot |be kept out. Like the fly, she alights wersistent attacks, and then but temporarily. At Saratoga she seats herself under the very shadow of the hotels, but scats are very dear there, and she can offer no such prices as her sister in misory at Long Branch or Sheepshead Bay. Good | board may be got in Saratoga by husband and wife at 850 a week, but not much less within a mile of the center. Along the Jersey const—at Seabright |and Monmouth Beach—owners will only sell or let property on the express condi- tion that the owner or lesseo permits no boarding-house on the property under a forfeiture of the agreement. —— A Lady Lawn Tenniser. v. Sun. strollon Washington Heights revealed to a correspondent a fashionablo girl fashionably playing lawn tennis. Sho had more than the average height of her sex and was symmetrically perfoct. Her figure was increased in what }u: SUPPOSCs Was o Jersey bodice was elastic, woven and seamless. In his opinion there was no corset under it, else she could not possibly have been so sup- ple nor would every movement of the muscles below her shoulder-blades have | been visible. He does not like to think | that she was consciously on exhibition, |and that her poses and action were | studiously. Women may like to know that her skirt was short, striped and scant; that her stockings were black; that her shoes were alligator skin, cut low, and that, as to her hat, their fancy must construct it out of the bare assertion that it was big and so eccentric in shape that no architect could give an idea of it on paper without at least a hundred cross- section views. | ——— ) CLOSING OUT CLOSING OUT SUMMER GOODS AT BUSHMAN'S, Tt will pay you to sce Nun's Veilings, Buntings, Dress Goods, Silks, Ladies’, Gentlemen's and Children’s Underwear, Hosiery, Gloves. Our prices are always as low as the lowest, and often lower. See them at Bushman's, ——— Cotter does fine printing, e— PROPOSALS FOR EXCAVATION. led proposals will be recoived at the office of Dufreene & Mendelssohn until 4 o'clock p. m. on Wednesday July 18th for the excavation of School House to bo built on Deleware & King sts. Plans und specifications are on file at the oftice of Dufreene & Mendelssohn, [J. 14,3t] W, Wortimax. e 1 of Window Glass just ro- One ¢ ceived at F. Goodman’s. ———— NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS. until for the ud proposals will be recei 12 o'clock A. M. July 17th 188 fi[ury brick, with stone k cuse to be erected on Howardstreet bewveen9thand 10thstreets [served. Send bids to the Right Roy- | Bishop O'Conner. | Jy 9 | —— | For White Lead and Mixed Paints Go | to Gooduman's L | ove orns, and is gy LK OF 10NGY REFUND) For sale only by F . Prico wnk Rog- ents, at the Millurd Hotel Pharmacy. 18-1mo p— TO WHOM 11 MAY CONCERN. =he public please take notice that 1 am The sole proprictor of the grocery store |No 516 South 10th street, and was so ever since the opening of said store, hay- ing never had an associate. To protect my in I give due notice that I shall [ ot pay or be responsible for any doebts incurréd by any party or parties signing themselves as my company, . PrrEmson, Omama, July 16th, 1833, jy16-3t At all events tho fabric | ;, MAX MEYER & CO,, HAVANA CIGARS! AND JOBBERS OF DOME; CIGARS, TOBACCOS, PIPES | SMOKERS' ARTICLES PROPRIETORS OF THE FOLLOWING CELEBRATED BRANDS: Reina Victorias, Especiales, Roses in 7 Sizes from $60 to $120 per 1000. AND THE FOLLOWING LEADING FIVE CENT CIGARS: THAT “KNOWLEDGE 1S POWER NEEDS NO DEMONSTRATION, AND HE WHO BY EXIERIENCE KNOWS THE VALUE OF TAR- RANT'S SELTZER APERIENT DOES NOT NEED TO BE TOLD THAT HE HAS IT WITHIN HIS POWER TO WARD OFF FEVERS, BILIOVS ATTACKS, HEADACHES, AND ALL THE IL1S ARISING FROM A DISORDEREDSTOMACH, LIVER ORBOWELS. A TEASPOONFUL IN A GLASS OF WATER, BEFORE EATING, ACTS LIKE A CHARM, AND NO WISE MAN WILL BE WITHOUT IT. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS RS OF 1c |NEBRASKA LOAN AND TRUST (0. HASTINGS, NER Capital, - $250.000. JAS Prosident A L CLARKE, Vice Presidont E. C. WEBSTEI | Treasurer C. P, WERSTER Cashier DIEECTORS Oswald Oliver E. C. Wobster Jas . Hoartwell, D, ML MeEliiniey First Mortgage Loans a Specialty | Combination, Grapes, P]rgogress Nebraska, Wyoming and rigands. samuol Alexandor, L. Clark Goo. 11, Pra This Company furnishes a pormanont home institn fi e B WE DUPLICATE EASTERN PRICES. SEND FOR PRICE LIST AND SAMPLES. YER & 1l farms in all w Fosponsiblo loca of the state through E. L Morse & C : REAL ESTATE [BARGAINS, 1622 Capitol Avenue. { GUNS cfl ‘"flf’ORI NG GO»ODS NEB, Anheusér-Busélfi_ BREWING ASSOCIATION: | CELEBRATED 'Keg and Bottled Beer This Excellent Beer speaks for itselt, JOR SALETwo houses and lota in Place, $1,000, and 81, iz tine at 8 e cont Two Tt i Shinn's addition §700 each 100 cash, balance in 6 equal annual PAYIIONES At § pe tho place #200 vach § cash balance on time, | Two and one half acres finely improved | and nicel, aoeiror iehlng, foF paricuas | e | 5 3 miles N W, of clty, 2 | Fxeis. 1000 ponsing cultivation, Price $4.000. | Two hundred acres & mile N, W. of FElkho cultivated, | Rarn; anid R, | o b &V ORDERS FROM ANY PART OF THE STATE OR THE ENTIRE WEST, : . ‘Will be Promptly Shipped. ALL OUR GOODS ARE MADE TO THE STANDARD OfCurG-ruarantee. GEORGE HENNING, Sole Agent for Omatiniand the West. Oftice Corner 13th and Harney Strects. ro Nice house ar Neb. A taken i 10 lot at Gr . Only 875 ench. Twenty to thirty houses for rent. Loans Negotiated. 5 NEBRASKA LAND AGENCY. 0. F. DAVIS & €0, (SUCCESSORS TO DAVIS & SNYDER.) General Dealers in REAL ESTATE 1605 FARNAM ST., - OMAHA. E. B. CHAPMAN & CO,, Wholesale Grocers ! 1213 Farnam St., Omaha, Neb. Double and Single Acting Power and Hand PUMES, STEAM PUMES, Ingine Trimmings, Mining Machinery,l Belting, Hose, Btass and! Iron Fittings, Steam Packing at wholesale and rejail. HALLADAY WIND:MILLS, CHUR( AND SCHOOL BELLS. Corner 10th Farnam ‘St., Omaha Neb. le 200,000 acros carcfully selected lands Tow prico and on_ easy torns. de in Douglas, Dodge, Colfax, Washington, 'Merick, “Twxes paid in all parts of the State. Money loaned on improved farms, Notary Public Always in office. Correspondence JOEN M. CLARKE, Oldest Real Estate Agent. SALEM FLOUR. 1 the Combined Roller Stone System. We Wo have oponed a brauch at 1618 Capitol avenue i Flour in ninde at XCLUSIVE wal Kh Omuha. Write for Pric alem, Richardson Cor, Nebrask ur flour to one Airm 1) a place. . Addros eithor VALENTINE « REPEPY, Salem or Omahay’Neb. Notary Public andPractical Con- veyancer. m1omke.6m € Clarke solls Houses and Lots, Residence Lots and Business Lots all over the city, and all additions, be improved and unimproved farms lower () other avont. mar 16- M. R. RISDON, Genlnsurance Agent REPRESENT 0,000,00 | 5,000.00 WILSON’'S e i Sheet Iron Warks | OMAHA, . . NEBRASKA. T3uild wll kinds of Steam Bollors. Suoke Stacks, Broeching Lard, Water and Oil Tanks, and do genera. latedron business, Kepair ity and Country. All woek Done at Eastern Prices and Warranted ! ad Bowlers will be kept on hand. Having had many yearsoxperiencein the trade in diffes t itry, L confidont | can give satisfaction, having the lest shop and ols in the State, Shop J. M. WILSON, Proprietor. ove adly United States Depository. First National Bauk OF OMAHA—~ Cor. 13th and Farnam Sts. The Oldest Banking Establishment in Omaha, HUCCESSORS TO KOUNTZE BROTHERS, Organized in 18568, Organized as a National Bank in 1863, $200,000 N . $150,000 OFYICKIS AND DIRROTOWS HrRuAN Kountzx, Proside Joi A. CREOUTON, ¥ AUGUKTUN KOUNTZE, 2 A J. PorrLEToN nd Plerce Streets T. STINEIOI.D, MANUFACTURER OF Galvanized lron Comices, Window Caps, Finials, ‘Neb sident. Bkylights &cW ma Thirteenth Stroet F. 1. DAVIS, Cashior. W. 1. Mraquiek, Amsistant Cashier. |8 Transacts o general hanking business. Tasucs time | J H cIBsoN sacts b " . . ’ e CARBIAGE AND. WAGON AYOEACTORY. Francisco as | CORNER TWELFTH AND HOWARD 1 REETS, OMAZEIA, - Particular attontion glven to repairing, Satis 2ct (& euaranteed. Edinburgh aud the princ citios of the Continent of Europe. JAMES MoVEY, Practical Horse Shoer Makon & specialty of Roadstors and tonderfoot hor E - son. Bhops, Dodgo stroet bet. 11th aad 1ah, OF Bollevire Hrnee. McCARTHY & BURKE, COLP STORLAEE fUO R"rrms‘.s p Lfifigsf UNDERTAKERS! N LARGE OR SMALL QUAN AT 8 ) #arWarehouse and Iefrigerators $501, 508, 506, 507 Howard streeh Omaha, Neb. Jgi [Apply 40 218 14TH STREET, BET, Commission’ e i, AN D' B‘ Bm’ ' " Merchant, NNEE.

Other pages from this issue: