Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
2 e ——————— et e e THE DAILY BEE-+OMAHA, TUESDAY. JANUARY 29, 1884, —— — — THE MORAL OF IT. ‘We may moralize as much as we please about pain; but the fact is, that we don't like it while it lasts, and that we want to get rid of it as soon as we can, Whether caused by rheumatism, gout, disordered liver, weak nerves, irregular kidneys, bad blood, or anything else that is just the reverse of what it should be, the sooner it is out of the system the happier we are. - Whether pain is the result of imprudence or of acci- dent, or is sent as a punishment for our sins, may be a nice question for the philosophers to argue; but peo- ple who are suffering want first to be rid of the pain, after which those who are fond of argument may argue the matter to their hearts’ content. Above all theory, argument, and philosophy, comes the delightfu? fact that BROWN's IRON BITTERS drives pain away. Sufferers run n¢'fisk in trying this medicine, the enly com- pound containing iron wlich carries no mischiefwith it. Thoée who have used it will tell you so; and you can for yourscllyhy buying a bottle Health is Weaih] yi K. C. West's Nenve Axp Doarx Tor wENT, n guaranteod specific for Hysterin, Dizzi- a0ss, ' Convulsions, ¥its, Nervous Netrulgia, Heatlacho, Norvons Progtration cansed by tho nsd of aleohol or tohoco, Wakefulnens, Mental Do- prossion, Softening of the Brain resulting in in eanity and loditie to misery, decay and dey Preninturo Old Ago, Barronncss, Loas of pos - in_cithor sox, Involintary Losses e Spermat arrhaea caused by oyor-o: of thobrain, rolf- ver-indulgenco, Kach box coi To cure pny oris ach ot for six boxes, werompanied with send tha parchaser one writtn o fund t Inon i 1 aours, G 0. F. GOODMAN, A ouy Omaha Nol DR, FELIX LE BRUN'S ;| will givo employmant to”all those who Dr.FelixLeBrun&Co ‘SOLE PROPRIETORS, 50, F. Goodman, Drugyles, [Sole Alll‘-.lg.ofih’!l 266TH EDITION, PRICE $1.00, KNOW THYSELF, A GREAT MEDICAL WORK ON MANHOOD! Xahausted Vitallty, Norvous and Phsioal Do 'm— ‘Dooline (0 Man, rorsof Youth, and the ‘miserios resulting trom indiscretions or ex. gemtes. & book for overy mn, young, middle-aged, and old. " It contains 125 presoriptions for all acute and chronlo disoases cach ono of which s Invalusble 80 found by the Author, whose exporience for ‘such a8 probably never beforo fll to th 1o of any physloian. 300 pagos, MIn;“ French muslin, embossadcovors, uarantood 10 bo » finer work, ln ,—mechanioal, lit- arary and profossional,—than any other work sold o this country for §2.50, or the monoy will be refunded in overy inatanoa. Frioe only §1.00 by mall, post: pald. rative sumplo 6 oonte. Send now. Gold medal awarded the author by the National Medical Association, 0 the oficers of which ho refers, “This ook should bo retd by tho yorn {oe intrue the afllioted for rellof, It will benofit $0 whom this book d%u Institute, or Dr. W, Blroot, Boaton Mase. ' | tled by the town being incorporated and ho | Weeping Water BROWN COUNTY. The Lay of lhehLaml inrme Northwest Tersely Stated, How Land Oan be Obtained and its Cost ~The Town of Long Pine, Uorrespondence of Tur Bee, Loxe Pixe, Neb., January 24th, 1884, ~.1 have before me fifteen lotters, which camo by the last mail, all making in- quiries regarding Long Pine and vicinity. Theso letters areaddressed tome, through the recommendation of *‘Colonel James,” from Long Pine. To answer all these lotters would re- quire all my time. I have answered many. But they continue to pour in, w0 1 ask for space to make a general re- ply, believing that those who read **Ool- onel James" will read this, Brown county is forty-eight miles wide and sixty long. The Sioux City & Pa- cific railroad passes through it from east to west, making forty-eight miles of road bed, five stations, two tothe east and two to the west of Long Pine. This place is a passonger and freight di n of the above road, and as Colonel James says is “in the geographical center of the coun. ty.” We confess that Long Pine, to a Fnuor-by, has had the appearance ‘‘of a ack of push,” buv the best of reasona’ have existed, which strangers know nothing of. Individuals have been attempting to make entries under the pro-emrtiun.hnme-und and soldiers addi- tional laws, and each entry has been re- jected by the gen land office for the reason_that the tract was occupied as a town site and used for the purpose of trade and business. This state of affairs has complicated matters and none but those who was familiar with the facts would build. Thij matter has within the past week been set- the corporate authorities making entry under the town site act, acquiring title direct from the government, at the usual rico of $1.25 peracre. The sale of the [:;!A, which are now being adjusted by the town trustees, will be sold and the pro- coeds go into the town treasury to create # fund for public improvement without a tax upon the oni Lotejare being sold rapidly to those who will build but no sale to speculators Building has commenced in earnest and there is work for mecha at from $2 to 83 per day. Building in the spring want to worl Regarding government lands there are at least 10,000 quarter sections in Brown, county, from which those desiring can solect their homesteads and pre emptions, Any crop that can be grown in Nebraska or Towa can be grown here. Thero is moro timber in Brown county than any other county in the state. The land is adapted to farming and stock raising. The only correct way for any man who wants government land is to come and pick if out. It is safe to say not one man in ten goes away with- out finding what he wants, Horses, mules, oxen, co farming implements, clothing, groceries, etc., eto., etc. are the same price here as in other local- ities in Nebraska, Brown county hasone flouring mill big one, even in Michigan, where the sixty-six-inch saw is in common use. There these H3-foot saws are run at a speed of from 500 to 700 revolutions in orway pine logs, and they cut as deep with each revolution as the monsters above described. The little chisel-bit teeth will chew out pine during a whole working day, and an entire set of dull ones can_be replaced next day in five minutes for three cents a teoth, Some of the sawdust from one of these great saws was sent from Michigan to the establishment of a great saw-maker in this city. It was esteemed as a curiosity. It was not dust at all, but a mass of little pellets of wood, three-cights of an inch in thickness,, The lumbermen prefer to waste lumber in this way provided they get speed out of their tools, The huge saws are used singly in sawing a rough log into planks. Afterward the planks are reduced to desired widths by vdger saws, which are smaller impl ts re- volving together at the pro distances one from the other, A saw maker must know whether or not his customer wants to run his pur- chasc at high rate of speed before the saw is made, Saw makers, in developing a disk of steel into a saw, hammer it so as to leave cither a hard or a soft center. A saw that has a soft center will wobble in the middle if a person takes hold of it by the edge and shakes it. If it hasa hard center one part will not shake more than another. A saw with a hard center, if driven at a high rate of speed, will not cut straight. Its edges will wobble. But f it has a soft center and is sent around at the rate of 700 or 800 revolutions a minute, the centrifugal force straining at the centre stiffens the saw and keeps the edgo steady. To the average mind it would seem that there has been the same straining after ornamental effect in the vertical saws, 80 odd are the shapes of the teeth. But here, again, the study has been solely to produce stremgth and out- ting power. Some of the vertical saws have dull teeth alternating with the sharp ones, The dull ones do not reach out as far as the cutters, Their purpose is to clear the sawdusj from before the cutters. 3 —— Humor in the Stomach. Much of the distress and sickness at- tributed to dyspepsia, chronic diarrhoea and other causes is_occasioned by humor in tho stomach. Soveral cases, with all the characteristics of these complaints, have been cured by Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Other cures effected by this medicine are 8o wonderful that the simplest statement of them affords the best proof that it com- bines rare curative agents and when once used secures the confidence of the people. e —— THE MAN ON A STOVE TRUCK. Surprising Work of His Movable, Passionless, Uold Gray Eye, From the New York Sun. A long line of vehicles, led by a trucl iled high with stoves, was moving down Beekman street yestorday when progress was suddenly checked by a wild Irishman, who wheeled around the corner of Wil liam street and started up the track. He stopped, and so did the long line of trucks opposed to 5 “‘Pull out, pull out; d’y he: Oi have the roigh* ay way. you—" The driver who sat atop of the tower- ing load of swoves put his elbows on his knees and looked with an expression of curious interest at the obstructionist, who was howling like a madman {for the right ere, here, now running and two more under con- struction—several saw mills, two of which are within half a mile of the town of Long Pine—and one of the fl-uringol(;fl]ll when completed to cost frem $8, to $10,000 is being built onPine creek, half a milo from the depot and on the Long Pi;{e town sil s inquiring for land, want it near u)wn.:z f-haqy can do business and hold a homestead. To those Isay you can’t get it unless you buy. That day has past when good government land will lie snug up to town for any great length of time, ~What this Zoounty wants is farm- ers who come here to farm,and merchants who come to do business, No half and half. Respectfuly, C. R, Grover, it ‘Wel De Meyer. 1t is now undisputed that Wel De Mey- er's Catarrh Cure is the only treatment that will wlutnly cure Catarrh—fresh or chronfc, **Vory_oficacious, Saml, Gould, , Neb,” One box cured me, Mz, Mary Konyon, Bismark, Dakota,” “Tt rostored me to the pulpit, Lev. Geo. Ii. Reis Cobleville N. Y.” “One box radically cure Rev. H, Taylor, 140 Noble street, "' A perfect oure after 30 year: D, McDonald, 710 Broadway, N. Y., &c.,, &. Thousands of testimonials are rocolved from all parta of th wor ered, $1,00, D tements by the cured mailed free. 17, B, Dewey & Co., 182 Fulton street, N, Y. tues-thur&sat-m&e-Sm o — WITH BIG LOGS. Huge Circular Saws that do not Need Sharpening, and that Move Like Lightning. m | New York Sun. ™ Groceries CAN A¥FORD 0 Bu ‘Wishout 1y, The hfi.fi circular saw that has been sent out of this city recently was exactly six feet in diameter. It was ordered by & match company and went to Michigan, Fifty-gwo teeth projected from its rim, It is now revolving at tho rate of 672 re. volutions & minute, and is capable of making a ten-inch to twelve-inch cut with each revolution. It can saw off a forty- foot p'auk, therefore, in an infinitesimal po! of a minute, though as a matter of faot the frame on which are fed to saw is adjusted to move at about the speed at which a man can walk, At that rate, there is no but a whirr and & shriek to announce journey of a log's length. This is not a solid saw or it would have more than one hundred 3 the plays 1t Jooks punz ornamental, it prevents the steel from in, EE.%?» . | each other, of way. A roar of distant execrations from up the street indicated that the blockaded truckmen felt sensations of a decided character. A shopkeeper who came out on the sidewalk in his shirt sleeves and stood looking on with much interest, asked the wild Irishman why he didn't pull out on one side of the track and leave the rails to the loaded trucks, “‘Because the laws gives me the middle av th' sthreet, ye monkey faced divil, and Oi’'m goin' ter have it.” The man atop of the stoves still gazed pensively at the Irish obstructionist. He had cold gray eyes and a serious face. His gaze never wavered from the man in his path, and he didi’t speak a word, though the chorus behind him swelled in force and fury ever{’ minute. The Iri man, whose truck by the way was un- loaded, jumped up and down and yelled persistently, Jecassionally his™ eyes encountered the cold gaze of the man who sat on the stoves. Then he wculd have a violent paroxysm of rage, and become more uproarious than ever. Some irresi- stible power kept drawing the Irishman’s eyes toward those of the stove truckman until at last the two staxed steadily at The blood su: into the face of the man who wanted the right of way. His nose, which habitually wore a warm and ruddy hue, became a dull crim- son, his eyes rolled, and his whiskers, which seemed to have been tossed care lessly about his face by a facetious whirl.- wim{, and to have taken root without dis crimination or well defined purpose, be came snarled with the vehemence with which he shook his head. 8till the man on the stoves gazed upon him with ohilllg disapproval. At last th wild one reached the climax of his rage with a wild whoop. Then he an to weaken, Slowly he withdrew his eyes from the frigid glare of the man on the stoves, and gil voice sank from a yell to a gurgle, Then he lathered his horse with the butt of his whip, and witha parting, but thoroughly cowed, glance at the steadfast gray eyes, slowly pulled out ot ust as his ving truck started his horses up and moved rapidly down. His forward wheel struck a rear wheel of the obstructionist's truck as he passed, and the wild Irishman was thrown into another fit of rage. He turned with a howl of defiance, and encountered over the top of the load of stoves thq clear and cold, gray oyes. His voice became hushed, and he turned with a superstitious look toward his “Git up, you!” he said nervously. i'll have a Chinayse spasm 1if Oi see thim ghool eyes agin " e — Letter fromSenator Jacobs. SkxATE CHAMBER, Avpany, N, Y., March 31st, 1882, For a long time it has been my habit to use Branorera's Puis. In fact, I have seldom had occasion to use any other medicine, and it affords me great i that for Biliousness, f), other 1lls of the sy tem, to which men in_ publio life are more apt than others to be subject, they are an invaluable unudg JOHN 0, JACOBS, ¥or Constipation, J Foul Stemach, Dizziness’ and ¢ ) no P e e B ure. they are the family t and safe-guard. SHADOWS OF COMING EVENTS. I ) Perfecting Arvangements for a Large Creamery at Pairield, Its Success Almost Oertain—A Varl. ety of Personal, Social and General News, Correspondence of T Brr, Famviein, Neb., January 24,—Your correspondent had a conversatior. to-day with a moneyed gentloman from Kansas, who has been here the past two or three days looking over the field for the pur. poso of starting a creamery this coming spring. He thought Fairfield a very favorable point for such an entorprise, and said that he would return to Kansas and talk the matter over with an asso- ciate, and if certain obstacles that are now impending, can be gotten safely over, they will commence the erection of the necessary buildings at once. In con- nection with the above, one of our most prominent business men will enter the enterprise, in case the aforesaid gentloe- man from Kansas decides to go into it. The parties desire me, for the present, to withhold their names from the public, The writer knows tho gentlemen to have abundance of means, pluck, experience and business qualifica- tions, and that if they un- dertake to start a creamery here, it will be one that the citizens will be proud of. I will watch for further developments and will give your readess any further particulais that I may learn, Minor & Brown shipped two car loads of hogs east last Tuesday that averaged 200 pounds. Woe have some very fat and excellent looking porkers coming into this market. Mr. H. S, Hughes, of Spring Ranche, this connty, brought in a load last Monday that averaged over 420 pounds, Corn is coming into market very rap- idly and our corn cribs continue to grow correspondingly. Mr. J, C. Clark and A. J. Minor are each cribbing an enor- mous amount of it. Some of our eastern farmers would open their eyes very wide if they were to sce the size of some of our cribs, Brnrs To Mr. Samuel Lewis, on anuary 23, a girl baby; to D. W, Weir, n Decomber 31st, a seven pound girl; to L. ¥, Fryar, county clerk, on January 20, a.8on; to A, A. Randsll, county school superintendent, on January 19, an eight ound son, and to W. W. Mattles, on ecember 22, a son. The Ladies Aid society of the Congre- gational church met at the Exchange ho- tel Tuesday evening, and elected the fol- lowing ofticers for the ensuing year: Mrs, Townsend, president; Mr: Brewer, vice-president; and Mrs. K. I Willis, secretary. The ladies of the above church will give a leap year party and oyster supper Tuesday evening next, in Hop- per’s ball, “‘when each lady is expected,” says the secretary, in a card to the local papers, “to improve the opportunity to show to the gentlemen how courteous she can be.” Ah! Mrs. M. B. Baxter,of Charlotte,Mich., has been engaged by the Lecture assoc tion to deliver her lecture, “The Coming Woman,” Monday evening, January 28, in the M. E. church, Mr. M. B. Frees, of Chicago, was in tHe city Tuesday looking after his lumber and coal interests here. His partner,Mr. Montgomery, retired from the firm of Frees & Montgomery, and their popu- lar and efficient salesman, Mr. J. C. Hedge, succeeds him, so the firm name now reads, Frees & Hedge. Land hunters are pouring in from all quarters—the like of which was never known before te the “‘oldest inhabitant,” and all that come are satisfied. Prices are good,with a strong upward tendency. COoLONEL JAMES, e —— The Doctor's Endorsement, From John Kuhn, LafayetteInd., who announces that he is now in *‘perfect health,” we have the following: ““One year ago I was, to all appearance, in the last stages of con- mmvcluu Our best physicians gave my case up, ly got 80 low our doetor said I'could not live twenty-four hours. My friends then purchased a ‘bottle of DR, WM. HALL'S BALSAM FOR THE LUNGS, which con. siderably benefitted me. I continued until I took nine bettles. I am now in perfect health, having used no other medicin DR, DEWITT 0. KELLINGER'S LINI- MENT is infallible for Rheumatism, Sprains, Lamenoss and Disease of the Scalp, and for promoting the growth of the air, Edey’s Carbolic Troche diseaso. colds and pre- vent e — COLORKADO MINERS, How the Miners P the Winter in Snow-Bound Localities, Hundreds of miners ave snow-bound in the mountains of Colorado, says The Den- ver Republican, and must remain so for soveral months. It is interesting to lance at the condition of the majority of Eheu isolated dwellers on the sides and near the summit of thé ranges which con- stitute the backbone of this continent, Their cabins are commondious, warm aud cemfortable, and are generally situ- ated at or near tunnel workings, which afford them easy and safe acce: scenes of their day and night toil. These drifts are used as storehous: for provisions of all kinds, and while some are natural icehouses, others are temperate enough for articles that would be injured by frecaing. The experienced, prudent miner locates his cabin in the timber, which tempers the furious wind- storms and also ts him from the dangers of the dreaded snow-slides. If the situation is above timber line, he chooses u flaf by mountains are not high enough to hold suow-banks te break away L lha]hflnvp idge of solid rock in place or upon a “‘hog-back,” which is the sharp divide between two gulches, and upon which both the winds and the countour of the ground prevent snow rom accumulating, Granting that he has mafety secured to him, what are the remaining conditions of his months of imprisonment! The natural tastes and estic instincts of the individual are the gaugesof his proparation Yor thoro l:inymant or mere toleration of voluntary exile, and hence the habits and customs, the plessure and amuse- ts, and the modes of living are as ble as among the same class of g“.fhudulu wintering in towns and oi- !iut, 85 a rule, the menu is exceljput, tables, pmh.“ud .un K :‘u;u",“ree:. aud relishes. Intelloctual pabulum can be made as diversified as in lower alti- tudes, with ‘h"rfi?.: exception of daily tastes sud accomplishments provide ge- nerously for enliyening the hours between labor and rest. The convivial soul takes good care that the flowing bowl does not become exhausted ere the snow melta from the trails, or that the tobac- co plug and pouch are amplo for him- self and all chance visitors. Water is obtained by melting the snow, and supplies of wood are previously pre- pared, The miners, from their cosey cabins, are the observers of the terrific battles of the elements, and not infrequently wit- ness nature's most awe-inspiring throes, commonly termed snow-slides, The snowfall amounts to from three to ten feet in depth on the level, and this is banked by the winds into drifts hundreds of feot in height, and covering hundreds and thousands of acres in extent, accord- ing to the lay of the land, and when they become avy, or the lower supports give way by melting or settling, the whole mass plunges down the steep mountain sides, uprooting, overturning and crumb- ling all obstacles in its pathway until its force is spent in the valloy below or against the opposite mountain side. It is impossible to conceive the enormity of the destructive power of a huge snow- alide until one follows in its wake down & mountain, where it has cut a huge swath " | Cooke C H above which the | Rock through a heavy forest, hurled from their base gigantic bowlders, scooped vut the channel of a frozen river, $H: doposited the entire debris in solid mass far up upoa the opposite bank of the canyon. Nlimu-u have become expert in detecting the location and direction of impending slides, and are thus enabled to avoid them, They, however, become reckless or careloss in estimating the time of their ocourrence, and, by passing over the field they expect to see move later on, they are engulfed in itssudden breaking away, and are hurried to a death they might have escaped by the exercise of more patience, The woband Norwegian shoes enablo the practical operator to climb the mountaius and swiftly descend to the sottlements for mail or any necessaries of life which have not been previously sup- phied. The writer has often been sur- prised most agreeably at the preparations for comfortable and even luxurious living by men thus snow-bound in the mountains in different parts of the state, and in only a fow instances has noticed any scar- city or lack of variety in the essen- tials of either comfort or national ewjoy- ment. —— “My Granafather's Clock,” Was once a very popular_song, but like man other nentimental tanes. it dossn's wear well. Dr. Thomas® kelectric Oil will wear; it will wear away all aches, spains, and pains, and repay its purchaser a hundred fold, e —— LETTERS Remaining in the Omaha postoffice unclaimed for the week ending Jan, 26, 1883: GENTLEMEN, Ashburn R Autrom J Appleton G B{Mk JB Bowers A Beachler A Balding J H Brown H O Brien J Blake F Cunningham C Corey J Cassidy J Cain H C Cowles C C Clarke C J Chatman Mr Davis T Divine B Evavs B Fisher N Fostor H Grimes Y Galligan J Gray L Griswold C Gallagher J D Hester W ) Haskell J B Haibel J M HallH W Halsted H I Harming C Harris f: * Hayden M W Jones W A Jensen I, Johnstone Jhonson J G Rolly K Kennedy J Kellner A ¥ Kelly D C Kitchen A Lindquest N Liston M Lehnourt H HA Livingstone H C ux 1o A I JS Lewis E G Miller J W Petorson K Ringgold 8 F—3 Reid G Rohson D W Sloan W Seran W I, Swith C Stalls DI Todd C H Walfner C Wesloy W ¢! Youngman D POURTH CLASS, Beattie Mrs J Stacey N LADIES, Butler Mrs M Bradford Mrs M E Barrett Mrs Cugno Miss L, Cooke Mirs 8 M Daley Miss F' 1 Dandas I, Ekstrom F Fink Mrs J ¥ (Georgo Miss E Greer Mra 8 HandMrs J 8 Howe Mrs A Hurloy J A Jansen Miss I. Kojal Miss O Lundgreen Miss C Louis Mrs J $ Lee Mrs C B McTiguo Miss A Miller C N McClennand Mrs S Mullen Miss B Nelson Mo L 1 Norgren ) Olson Miss Peckins Mrs 8 Robinson Miss 3 Rogors Miss J Stevens Mrs ¥ Sixeur Miss Anderson J Anderson 8 M Allen E A Authonisen C Barsbatle J H Borgloman 1 Buns F C Brooks H O Hoemer B Berny Mr Campbell G Colbert T Clark J C Chism J ‘ohen H T, Cotton M C Coleman J Dennings J Dermody J Eckhardt G Frenzel A Geatrans R N Gill J M Grubles L. ladhill E Guhun J Hills R T Harris C Hager J—2 Haines F Hewitt E S Holp J F Hamilton C Hennenhofer 1. Tmoberdorf T Johnston P Jones E Joyce J King W Kreibs W R Kirkham J Kosier ¥ Koons B ¥ Lester W Richards ¥ Steimle W Smith A Sn i Wecker W Bennett i A Eastman W W Artson Miss A Brown Miss C ¥ Buckley Miss M Clark Miss G A Callahan Mrs K Crawford Mrs I Durno Mrs H W Mrs H Gilliam Miss B Gornor Miss 1.—2 Graf Mrs ¥ kiall Mys M Hoffman Mrs Johnson M Juhunkle Miss A Kline Miss L Lockwood Mrs M Laooker Mrs N Miller Mrs S A Malone Miss M M an Mrs K MoCUurt Miss M Nicholson Mrs E Veodman Miss Willinms Miss O Wendle Miss G Wright Mrs M e —— 2-Big Thieves -2, Dyspepsia and debility are two big thieves; they creep in and steal our health and comfort b | beforo we know it. Lot ua put u stop to their invasions with a bottle of Rurdock Blood Bit- ters, t0 be had at suy drug store, | —— The Des Moines river at Des Moines is yielding 1,000 to 1,200 pounds of fish a aday. Men and boys gather them with spears through the ice. — Horsford's Acid Phosphate. Beware of Imitations. Xmitations and counterfeits have again appeared. Be sure that the word **Hoxs. rorp's” is ou the wrapper. Noue are genuine without it, Has the Jargest Stook in Omaha and Males tb—.e Lowest Prices. CHARLES SHIVERICK.. Furniture! BEDDING AND MIRRORS, Purchasers should avail themselves of the opportunity now offersd to buy at Low Prices by taking advantage of the great inducements set out ;LSSENGER erevarox |CHAS, SHIVERICK, 1206, 1208 nd 1210 Farnams To All Floors. H OMATA, N H.B.IREY &GO Real Estate Agents, i 16th and Farnam Strects. Below will be found a few of the BEST and most DESIRABLE bARGAINS: OMAHA CITY PROPERTY. No.' 211—2 story brick residence, near St. Mary’s avenue, at & bargain, ;}o. 221—12 vacant lots, 1 block from street cars, same distance from Hanscom Park. ~ We offer these lots, which are very desirable for building purposes, at a low figure for a few days only. No. 226—3 lots on Saunders street, near Charles,” These lota will be sold cheap and are well located for a block of stores. No. 220—Business property, rents for $2.000, pays 20 per cent. Best thing ever offered. No. 235—Three houses and lots, rents for;$1,200 per year. No. 241—3 lots in Bartlett's addition, very cheap. No. 253—15 acres in Cunningham’s addition. 2 No. 247—3 lots in Hanscom place, 3 No. 94—4 lots on S. 10th street. Easy terms. Each, $300. No. 102—House and lot. House, 5 rooms and basement. Lot, 60 ;140, 8. 10th street, near Charles, $500 down, balance in 2 years. 1,400, No. 84—9 lots, 66x132 each, S. 10th st. Must be sold altogether. ,500. No. 77—3 houses, 2 brick and 1 frame, on lot 66x132, S. 11th at. $4,900 cash, balance long time. $7,250. & No. 40—One acre lot and house, 4 rooms, 4 blocks, 8. St. Mary avenue street car line, Very cheap. $3,700, Liberal terms. No. 11—3 houses and lots, 60x140, 8. 16th st., N of railroad. This 1s the best bargain for an investor ever offered in the city. $2,5600. No. 90—A good house of 5 rooms, with basement and other good improvements, Lot, 50x150. F'ruit and evergreen trees 6 years old. Nice residence property. Easy terms. $3,200. No. 19—New house and barn. Lot, 132x148. This is a very de- sirable residence property, and is offered at a low price, WillJex- change for farm property. ~ $4,500. No. 143—2 lots in Block K, Lowe's 1st addition, $150 each. No. 163—8lots in Boyd’s addition. $1756 each. Easy terms. No. 167—2 lots in Lowe's second addition. Each contains 1 acre, with house and barn. Bargain, No. 169—4 acre lots in Lowe's second addition. No. 179—1 lot in Kountz' third addition. rooms, barns, etc. $1,800, No. 181—1 lot in Kountz' third addition, 2 houses, etc. $1,500. No. 184—2 lots in Block 8, Kountz' third addition. Must be sold wggther. $2,200. 0. 186—3 acres in Okahoma, with good 5-reom house and other improvements. 3,600 FARM LANDS, No. 261—40 acres near Fort Omaha, , No. 262—2 good farms near Waterloo, 240 acre farm near Osceola, Neb., $26 per acre. Will exchange for city property. Easy terms. y No. 12—2,000 acres of improved land in Hitcheock county, Nebraska, ranging in price from §3.50 to $10 per acre. No. 17— 640 acres of good farm land in Dawson county. Will ex- change for city property., $3.60 per acre. No. 22—The best farm in Nebraska, 7 miles from Omaha, contains 160 acres, 3 houses, wells, cisterns, barns and all other first class im- provements. Also orchard matured and bearing. Will exchange for cit& property. 0. 107—Several valuable and low-priced tracks of laud in Madison ocounty. 16 farms within from o 12 miles of railroad, and 23 pieces of im- proved lands, near Table Rock, Nebraska, all conveniently near market, and 1n many instances offered at groat bargains, N Among other counties in which we have special bargains in farms and unimproved lands, are Jefforson, Knox, Olay, Valley, Webster B;py, Harlan, [Boone, Filmcce, Cass, Seward, Merrick and Nuck- CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED. H.B. IREY & CO., Real Estate Agents, Southwest Corner 15th and Farnam 8t., Omaha, Neb, New] house of 3 Anheuser-Busch < BREWING ASSOCIATION CELEBRATED Keg and Bottled Beer This Excellent Beor spoaka fcr itselt, » V' ORDERS FROM ANY PAKT OF THE R STATE OR THE ENTIRE WEST, Promptly Shipped. ALL OUR GOODS ARE MADE TO THESTANDARD, OfoOurG-uarantee F, SCHLIEF, Sole Agent for Omahs an {*hs Wagt, Cor, fth Strest snd (apitol & vanw, .