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OMAHA DAILY BE “MONDAY JUNE 23, 1894, THE 4 GRAND IOWA LFHE REAT“{*Z*‘ Trotting CIRCUIT. $24,00000 in Purses, $600 FOR EACH EVENT. we a and 27, EIST COUNCIL BLUFFS, June 24, ing BY WAY O H OMAEA AND LINCOLN T0 DENVER, |fir 113 Entries. v KANSAS CITY AND ATCHISON to DENVER |sh Cedar Rapids, Marshalltown, Council Dot Tluffs and Des Moinescomprise the Towa Cir- O 1d Denver with through trains for | bay Purses, tel lit And all points in the Great W FIRST DAY—TUESDAY, - 2:35 Class SECOND DAY—WEDNESDAY, 3-00 Class with through trains for NEW YORK, BOS And all Eastern Ofties, At Peora with through trains fo olis, Cineinnati, Columbus, and a the South-Enst.' At St. Louis with' through trains for all points South, FOURTH DAY—FRIDAY, ™ 120 Class THIRD DAY~-THURSDAY, Indianap. | pit 2:38 Class 2:33 Class Pacing—Free for all. “a $ Elogant D 2:48 Class Free for all | cifaing Chot s =N Revolving Chairs, P Sleeping o Thos. Bowwray, Secretary, | Gra anebtie fore ning Care L & Fun duily toand from Chieno i Kansas Oit Chicagoand Council Blufts: Chicago and. 1, Moines, Ch St. Joseph, Atchison ACOB SIMS, S GADWRLL, | bl W ithns change. On running their own trains botw SIMS & CADWELL, Lincoln and Denver, and Ohi n City and Denver, Through o $ Orne s -a - aw Indianapolis and Council Tutrs, ’ G NG NORTH AND sourH. COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA* Solid Tr of Eleg; Offico, Maln Streot, Rooms 1 and Shugart & Mo [ Pullman F Mahon's Blook, Will practioe In State and eders! and Peoria. Only one change of cars bety courts R. Rlce M- D- $t. Louls and Des Moincs, Iowa, Lincoln, 3 CANGERS, g cthor tumors remored withoutthe | Drisk, and Denver, Goloraio: Council Bluffs, sto {| Chi to run daily to ouis; vin Hannibal; Quincy, ton, Cedar Rapids and Albert to - Prul and Minneapolis; Parlor Cars clining Chairs to and from St. Lonis knite or drawing o bl It 18 also the only Through Lino between GHRUNIG DISEASES B el ST\ LOUIS, MINNEAPOLIS and ST, PAUL, It is known as the gre: at T1 Over thirty yeara| practical experience Offioe No. | 1 INE of America, and is uniy § Pearlstroot, Council Blutly ted to be the & Oousilttionitrée Finest Equlpfied Railroad in the World for R a MI‘S. H J. Hllmfl M D “1;?:«:“:;1. Tickeis via this line for sale at pi: ' . U, - It coupon ticket offices in the United States &nd O . P HYSIGIAN & §URGEON1 T POTTE PERCEVAL LOWE 222 Middle Broadwsy, Counctl Blufts, Vice-Prea. &Gin. Manaser. ~~ Gen Sasacn @ i | tlo. WESTERN I0WA NORMAL l‘ —SCIENTIFIC AND— COMMERCIAL COLLEGE. COUNCIL BLUFFS - « . . 1owA: Will Open THE 23rd of JUNE 1884. S Billiard, Ball Pool, Carom,| T Pigortoto caurse for taachers nd thoso desiring | AND ALL OTIER GAMIN 8 bigher Enlish_education, a full business course, \ with ti 2 correspondence, short hand, ornamental penma £1°p, clocution, German and music. lendid rooms, 1irge, light and well furnished, charges very moder- ato, sost of living reasonablo, ‘ocicty good) expor. el sy "flfl‘&fi‘;fi,’;‘;’m “{','Lé}j‘l'.}'."” ot Write for Catalogues and Price Lists. s, I OUGH OAR rsally admit. BRUNSWICK & CO. | BILLIARDS: We Kangas City, Mo., 1321 Dougias St.. Omaha, Neb, HENRY HORNBERGER, Agent. |strc A Council Blut ROLLER RINK ICE CREAM PARLOR. Dancing Taught by Pror. ScuNoor Tuesday and Friday evenings from 8:30 to 10:30 o’clock. RINK FOR RENT AT $15.00 PER NIGHT. the) pecf AT b a » THE MONARCH The most extensive manutacturers of #TLARCEST FLOOR IN TOWN. | H H MARTENS, CASH TALKS ! At the well-known Establishment | 47 ‘application C. IN THE WORLD, 500 8. Tenth Stroet, . =+ - OMAHA, NEB. | of T two PIONEER GASH GIROCEERY ©Of Council Blufls, Notico our reduced Price List, Pure Breed Short-Horn —AND— taki ow foun pounds Nevy Eean Founds Bost Bulk § 12 pounds C 12 pournds C 25 hars Bufl From the Turlington Herds, Willbo he'd at the fai nne.» Lurlir-, .on Sta t'on, Otoe Connty, on in th .| TUESDAY, 100 100| Amone the Shert-Horns to be catalogned 170 {Roe Princ s 5, I' nicl Rotes cf S 8somo of the Poppy bra-ick) Mazurkn Koa 9, Ec_ter days, Roamonds, Young Mary's ¢ Duch-sson of | 805 Sale | att, Fyyio will start at 11 a, m, W. HARVEY, ¥. 0. ©arlington All grados, acoording to quality, 150 to 800 per tive und, po We algo carry o full line of Mon's, Ladies' and i Chlldron's fino Shoes and Men's Fine Boots at very low prics, Al ol o ot Fiawave and conertl | NOTICE TO CATTLE MEN| M merchandiss. Call on jia and bo cavinoed that vou vo o d © with us, o ganwave wmouoy by dealin : with us, - Goods delive (600 OATTLE FOR SALE, free ina the city, "“1a & words w6 ara bound to sell and challenge audaolo competition in tals count . FILRELT The ahove described cattle are all well br:d, na- ingto 200u or Brosdfay | tive Nebrasks and Jova. ST.LOUIS PAPERWARBHOUSE, | b Graham Paper Co, W, PLA o5y Albion, Neb pily 217 and 210 North Main 8t., 8t. Louls, WHOLESALE DEALERS IN SCHMELING & BELSCHNER, |wes DEALERS IN thre s PAPERS, (Vi &Q XNVELOPES, CARD BOARD AND 621 South 18th, between Jackson aud Jones Sta. PRINTER’S STOGK Job Work n Rooflng, Guttering, Ete., promptly done, M. £arCash pald for Ragsof ol Nebraska Cornice ~AND— / Ornamental Works boy. ECRET MATADIES scho find radical cure by my turn method, bused on recent sei- | vith vntih,:iu-\ arches, even in the e most desperate cases without any troublo to the funetions, | %24 MANUFACTUREES OF GALVANIZED IRON CORNICES Dormer Windowws, FINIALS, WINDOW CAPS, TIN, IRON AND SLATE ROOFING, PATENT METALIC SKYLIGHT, consequences of the sins of| A youlh, nervousness and im potence. abou thin; DISURETION GUARANTEED, Prayer t0 seud the Exact doscription of the 8o : ¥ [The Body of a Man Found fin the miles south of that placo. Mr. Connell [ago of tho world a sneaking wre reached the spot about 2 o'clock in the | has not even the daving of & desperado, PRINCIP AL LINE S :If‘(urnm»u but just before he arrived ¢ In Union Depots at Kansas City, [ing and fastened it to some bushes on the cuit, each place giving the same Classes and SAN FRANCISCO |the body whils he went to the station o [ ¥ DeOn of depredations and outrages, 2:43 Clasa 226 Class| GFOXIIN G- F1A ST, |ariftor azain, the ties becoming loosanc 1, Connecting in Grand Union Depot at Chicago Later word reached this side from Omaha moy, |thatthe body of an unknown man had Vst U8 Polrouah [ evidently the sewme corpse, word was sent 4 first finding, L. S. Powall, one car hogs, 68 head, to William Powell, one car hogs, 54 head, ncaSloopiii Cara iro o e 1o | Ransas City, via U, P, E. L. Streezy, one car cattlo, 30 head, 8. Beveridge, one car Chicago, via R, I, Chicago, via Mil. A. Oaler, eight cars cattle, 166 head, to Chicago, via R, I, 540 head, to Chicago, via Mil. classes of Travel, 120 head, to Chi V 1,125 nead, to Ogallala, via U. P, Orptain H. Metealf, one fast horse, to class at Ft. Dodge and Siovx Falls, ran |drels, actual business practics and gener- | 18 South 81 Stroct, Lt. Louis, 411 Dolaware Streot | woel. $50, recovered. into spasms, from which he died, Farmers around Creston say the pros- Small grain is in excellent condition and cora will yield an averuzo of 7 per cont. It is consolirg t7 hear tho farmers ex- press contentment, 9 they need a good orop to cover the loss sustained during the past three years, 427 Prices ol Billird and Pool Tables and materials, | Touise . Alberts, of Cedar Rapids ; M. [ gult of civie cowardice on the part of the L. Dudley, of Ida Grove ; H. F. Arnold, law-abiding portion of the community, of Manchester ; C. R, Leonard, of Cres- | This is mof inirequent in remote rural [ = = = much whiskey Tuesday nighe and started | such communities, it is a common circum- for home in " an_intoxicated condition, | stance that men w;ll meckly submit to We give traci ; E[ Een- ngus a E tro‘ns. Both legs wore cut. off just bo- | public opinion “runs down o thy e a ¢ % 1 to recover, The Western Union Telegraph com. pany has ordered areduction of 25 por cent JUNE 17 [ofice, The Hawkeyo sy no. oaro s ascribed, save that the expenses of the office have been running too high, On the other hand the rates for the markot roports furnished the board of trade rices, Lybils, | have been increased to the amount of 2" AdiressT. | pany is t be regretted, o3 the omployees ta. in this city have not received vory licra. present cut is enforced the boys will haye 2 months, died at Ottumwa at 3 a, m, on the 18th inst. 4 500 Cows and elfers. 0o Oae-year Steers. | Nancy Mitchell. She was born in Wash- married to John Potter in Carrol county, Ohio, September 25, 1828, two of the sons preceded them to the spirit Jand. Threo daughters and one uon, T. J. Potter, general mavagor C, B, J . railway company, still survive. Blaine's extraordinary pugnacity as a neighboring towns, He was @ brave boy the greatnossof the man was foro. Leure equally the sad con- | shadowed: district one fall when young Blaine was head with a Poter Parley's history for whispering, plunging madly up and down the aisle, toon foot at & jump, and seizing Jimmy by_the ear ho led him to tho platform and presently took him out to the wood shed, where ho saw him later with a pine slab whittled oft at one end. COUNCIL BLUFFS. ADDITIONAL LOCAL NEWS, TWICE FOUND FLOAT. — —_— - A Tale of Civic Cowardice in New gland. River Allowed to Float Away Springfiold (Macs.) Republi % and Again Fovnd the The simple folk of Little Comptsn, Rt T, and Westport, Me-~., two 'ittlo com muniticson the sound, with the state line betwcen them aud only connected Coroner Connell on yesterday received [ with the outer world by sailboat and ord from Crecent City that the body of | Stage. breathe easier now that Leander Omaha Side, dosk, strodedown the airle at about six. ! food for the table, Twice since Miss Knowles began her long fast sho has at tempted to eat food, but she was unable to keep it on hor stomach either time. A day or two aqo she swallowed a littlo beef broth, and was sick for some time. The girl has never fully recovered her voice since sho was taken i'l, and she atill speaks in & low tone, Dr. Hamilton, of Guilford, who has been attending her, say3 her repugnance fur fosd is caused by A nervous disease of the stomach, but he is urablo to account for her genoral good Yoa'th and her strength, for sho is able to ossist in all household duties, but the prepatation of food S. Taber Wastport, & lodged in ja'l at o daa been found about thres [Ny Beitord; TVi8 NG et by (ol ch who shotld put two or three towas in a reign of terror 8o great that no one dare charge Fm with any oTerse, much less under ain as there was nobody to hold an take to bring Fm to justi~o; but a recen ueat. 1t appears that G, R. Rudd shooting rTeay at Westport Fu s, st found the body floating in the water [fied matters very much, frionds of the d his fishermen in a boat towed it tnto | "B Oftender having quarreled and talked o ot thoir secrots to the world, o fay run & spoar into his cluth. |~y o' thing about this reign of ero it had been allowed to float off EVERY DAY THE BEST.|(y1o4q0. PEORTA LOUIS, [ nke aoudd lott his men thera to watoh [yt SN TELY o008 B the romark- egraph to the coroner. They belng a tle negligent, the body wr+ allowed. to Tt was back as far as 1870 that the frst outrage was committed, if the Providence en picked up on that side ‘‘witha chfork sticking in him,” and it being g the above information as to its SEIRANOP Bioat: Highway Surveyor Brownell owner was very much onraged. Brow ell’'s haystack was burned, several of ck at tho yards yesterday: feago,via R, I. otherwise maliciously harmed, but no Chicago, via R. 1. J. Blocker, one owner of the Snell farm, who proves to Rawlins, via U, P, was guilty of sundry immoralities, and in o & N 7 3 uller &2, one car hogs, 57 head, to guilty man was not accused. Shortly after the ta 130, via N. W, V. A.. Farris, twenty-eight cars cattle, 1,050 head, to Ogallala, via U, P, I, F. Rettel, one car Joon, v'a N, W. people of Westport trembled, but did not act, and thue invited more outrages, st Troy, N. Y., via R. I ——— IOWA ITEMS, the maliciousness was perpetrated upon |, fisherman, farm man was a thief, themselves for a week in the Williston ¥ Robert Presley, a middle-aged man, | house, but the only result was that they | for three, fulls, flushes and jook pots, was knocked down and robbed on the | nearly lost their lives by drinking out of | Well, sir, about that old stall ots of D:3 Moines in daylight leat a poison=1 well on the premises. The | wag well-known around Washington for Thursday. The Mshwaymen were quickly | night after their departure the houso was several years. He always nickered whon o | pursued eud captured, and the boodle, | burned to the ground. THE BRUNSWICK, BALKE, COL- |rirostored to shoot him: 'Tie atior sus [ ono of th gung and. is mow. wgbn wronc | LFSS cat watormllon and moat, and Ly LENDER COMPANY, [SUCCESSORS TO THE J. M. B, & B, C0,] homo so badly frightoned that ho went | 8¢ Fall river. "Meantimo the detectives | goon him eat wads of paper as though he 1 secured & warrant at New Bedford for was t1,ing to make the boys laugh, jlaber's arcost for burglary and the | Well, sir, Clay had a nisger notaed S A vall Ri tsfor a good orop ate flattoring. Iatter wos disarmed at the Fall River | to his surprise found himself in the hands | 1, of thy law, B O. F. Jansen, of Towa City; Wm. 1. |abloa creature could establish such a | planter, with a proviso in the bill of salo Thomas, of Sioux City ; Charles Kline, | reign of terror ina New England town, | that the planter should hitch Sam in ripoli ; M. B. Darnell, of Boyden: The whole affair shows the dreadful re- s i Cherles Haldine, of Coucil Bluffs ; | eommunities whire crimo is 80 raro that or R J. P. FILBERT, e f z | SRV ge. he arrest of for a sel i 209 Upper Broaaway, the FIHST ANNUE»_EAL SALE s MuMml’uE, ulcd 2 years, living t‘l'lnzfl“'l;lf:tstl:inuI;'ll:'cl:‘;flitfilu 1;:.;-'.:((; 1:’:!):1‘: THHF EXCHAN GE ’ . miles northeest of Ackley, took too|up the courage of the constabio, In ng the lllinois Central track. Just | easy outrayes losc they should “‘get ihe tarror is that theft does ot appenr to | nowadays wou to much as vindictivensss and lawles: | and were 8o well worn you could see the ness, moss stickiny out at tho sides. I'll bet Journal has tho right of the matter, when any. Ho used to slash his old sorrel 8 man tried in vain to buy_ the property |staliion with the ends of Wiy roina so of a Mrs, Snoll, liying north of Westport | loud you could hear it a block of. The harbor. Tho house wes set on fire ard stops of the buggy were gone and Mr, land finally camo into the hands of ' Clay used to jump over the wheols, Wnen would-bo-purchaser. Threo yoars later | ho wanted to got in he put vne foot on ordered [ the hub and swung the othor around over somo trees cut down on the road in front | the wheel and dash bosrd. The whooels The following wero the shipments of [ of the old Snell property and the | were o bigh he had to let th cattle poisoned by paris green and he wes never found it out. arrests wero made. A neighboring farm |the front wheols of his buggy squenking car cattle, 17 head, to | hand, however, started a story that tho [ o+ many notes as thero are on a piccolo.” bo Tabor, now in jail at New Bedford, stallion,” G due time the accuser was taken from his oker in Jobn Hancock’s sslo: i 00t 00 o 80 | R R e W s R sl R ot oeene oro mado but the presumably | from Col. Jim Bright, who lived o Falls Church, Virginia. Bright usod to ta -feathor out- | como over over overy week and play Tage respectablo citizen of Westport, | poker with Clay, and ho generally wont Hembaum M. & Co., nine cars hogs, | S: H. Gifford, fell into disfavor with tho back to Falls Church with a pocket full 2 * | vindictive “‘ownerof the Snell farm,” and of monsy. But that was Clay’s lucky Hembaum, M. & Co., two cars hogs, his hay-stacks were burned and his sheep night. Ho got away with $1,200 of * | and cattle potsoned. Last November the Bright's money, bis watch, saddle and Westport chapel was burned by an in- | by condiary and the next morntnga placard | of clothos that were in the_saddle-hags, H. W. G. Kuntz, twenty-two cars cat. | W08 found in front of it with the Inserip- | three finger-rings and a breast-pin, a R tion: ‘‘Another den cleaned out—a den brace of pistols and bowie-knifo and a cattlo, 10 hoad, | Of hypocrites.” At thia crisis tho good | pair of beots. . timer, with great animation; “that’s the Perhaps tho most dotestablo work of [ way thay played poker in thoss days, A John A, Williston, of Westport, a retired Why, didn’t you never hear of the {ime H had said that the Snell Henry Clay bot himself clean down to When Williston [ Algona_is planning for a 16,000 | was away from home lnst March his house | to pull that off, Dut tho other school buildirg, was invaded and his furniture smashod, | didn't wear an’ undershist to put up A system of water works to cost $7,000 | This dastardly act was repeated twice against it will bo built at Sac City. after that, and then it was that a tardy and the very t2ble he played the gamo on he trotter Alaho, who ran in the 2:30 |effort was made to follow up the scours. is now in the front room up stairs over The Fall River authoritics sent | Hancook's saloon. away and broke a log n Sioux City It | two detectives to Westport, who secreted about three feet square with a hole in the ' Clay came near him. Clay carried a Since then a foud has sprung up be- | pocket full of shelled corn nd he gave The Hawarden Commeroial learns that | tWeen two of Taber's friends, ono Palmer | the horse ahandfal every time he got int» THE []L]] BELI ABLE while two boys were playing together | having sail that he saw Taber enter Wil- | the buggy. The boys knew tho stallion L near Ireton one day le~t week, one of | 1iston’s house. In defending himself in woll, and they used to give him pieces of m drew agun on bis playmats and |2 8treet-fight over tho matter Palmer shot bread, eake nuts or anything of the sort. hearing of the Palmer case, and greatly | drive to Alexandria, ] gallop. Ho didn't stop until he got to There was now great rojoicing and to- | Mt, Vornon, twonty iles. off lief in Westport, Little Compton, Tiver- |he turned around and galloped all the tonand through the region where Tabor way back. operated, 1If this stato of things wore | dead at the edgo of South Washington. P!‘OD'I‘ A The following notaries public have been reported from a border stato the general There was over one hundred boys pres- . commissioned by Governor Sherman : congratulation would not be tempered | ont at the funeral, In venge Clay Thomas H. Rowland, of Randolph; Hy. [as it now is with surprise that so dispic- Fact, slr!” ——— HENRY 01 \Y The Nag the Great Statesman Won ata Game of Poker, s HORSE, Washington Letter th the Houston Post, “I recolloot Henry Cla. we'l," said a1 old-timer; **ho had one of the old style Concord bugqies, with top that suggested a Mother Hubbard bonnot. 1t was evidently a second-hand aff vt~ Mr. Clay had ‘uckod upin a trade and d do very well for an old woman to haul vegetables around town in. The cuehions were stuffod with moss W turnout very Honry Clay didn’t know what a lap robe was, and ¢35 for the whip he didn't 1 ve o top down toget out. They hrd axlo groeso in thoso daye, but Mr. Clay hau evidently Ho always drove his horso at a canter, and you could hoar *‘Ah, well do I remember that sorrel continued tho old timer, “Honry Clay won him one night at running on the avenue lo, overcoat, saddlo bags, a new suit *‘Oh, you needn'’t laugh,” said the old- man weat the whole hog or nothing. is undershirt, and ho offered fellow Well, sir, it’s 50, anyhow, 1U's an old pine table middle to drop the por contage throvgh m. Ho Juo day ho loancd the stallion to S am to Sam got drunk be- ore he loft town, and he stattec out on n Thero Tho old etallion dropped old the nigger to a Louisiana sugar- hafts and work him in a cano mill, 1213 Douglas Street, outsido the city ho laid down on the |scoundrels down on them” and “hayo | AUCTION AND COMBINATION k, and was run_over by the night | buildings burned.” A community whero the knees. Ho was alive when |in this apiritless attitude has to pay dear d, but it is hardly possible for him | for it in increasing luwlessness, dvoling of good repute, destruction of property and general social melting down and running off into the sand. It some- times nkes & higher quality of courage to swear out & complaint and take the firat step toward suyraining Justice and civil institutions than to ehoot n man at sight, S ho wages of men in the Burlington e ——— K7 S1LING PO FOUR MOONS, per month, This action of the com- An East River Girl who has Eaten no Solid Food Since th First ealaries heretofore, and when the ; of Kebruaty, rd time to get along. e re. Nancy Potter, aged 78 years and | Boston Globe, New HavEN, June 15.— East River, a little town on the Shore line road, be- tween Guilford and Melison, rejoices in the phenomenon of a youug woman who has lived since the boginning of February without eating solid food. She is Lizzie Knowles, the adopted daughter of Henry D. Knowles of the Gem Card company, and is between 15 and 16 years old, About two years ago Miss Knowles, who up to that “time had been in perfect heelth, was teken with a chill. She grad- ually became numb all over, and lost all serse of feeling, As she did not get bot- ter a physician was scnt for, Ho was un- able to do anything, The girl wasso weak sho could sesreely move; but although she lost her power of speech, no other mus- ol s were affectea, After an illuess of cight wecks Mies Lizzie began to recover her strength, and was s00n able to perform ordinary domes- tic duties, but the strango part of her cs0 was that when health returned she radually lost hor appotite. At first she refused meat, and all animal food, and her aversion soon extended to food of all kiuds, Soon she ate only one meal s day; but the period of fasting rapidly ex- tended to two or three days, and from that to only cne meal in & weck or ten days, Sinco the early part of February Miss Knowles hus abstained from eating any solid food at all, but ehs has drunk milk Her meiden name was on county, Pa,, April, 1806; was Y. P For nearly ears Mr. and Mrs. Potter lived hap- together. ‘T'he fruit of this marriaye nine children, six daughters and o sous, Throo of the daughters and ——— Blaine's Boyhood, any anecdotes are told of Mr. Ho was forever gutting into fights 7 his playinates, beiug whipped by his ol teachers or 'whipping them in ro. , and indulging in pitched battles boys bgger than himsclf from ly lad who could brook no control in many of the porformances of the new teacher came to the Indian Hill it fourteen years of age, and the first ¢ he did was to hit Jimmy over the Jimmy juiped up, and, Mi a lron Fencing! DR. BELLA, thouted us ho waved his hand imporiously | snd caten a littlo fruit. Hor dislike fos | o = Ofes Member of Several Scientific Societies, |at the teacher: food is 50 great that she will not enter |s. AR el aen, aARan OMonand Rapt § FOM R S Rl Nation 6,—PARIS, “*I've got you marked,” tho diving oom at meal time, and is un- | | COL, 0, Al Ldsu STRLET, kst NEB, Wée Wousksab i ster, who had gene back to his | blo to help Ler fo GALVANIZED IRON WINDOW CAPS, FINIALS, ETC, Olll\fltf? ........ P — Tho use of the term ** Bhor Line” in connection with 4 COrporate nawmo of & groat rond, conveys an {doa of st what shod by tho groateet rallway in Amorica, (rzoseo, Mjrwavkee Northern Illinols, Wiscouwin, Minnosota, lows Dakota; and a4 4 main lines, branches and conneo POOLS old daily on Base Ball Games, Horse Racing and all Sporting Events, FLARSHEIM & MA! Ty SINEOI,D. MANU FACTURKR OF CORNICES. 48th Stroeot, NEBRASKA THE CHEAPEST PLACE LN UMAHA TQ BUY Foll= fehbf=To=e Is AT DEWEY & STONE'S, One of the Best and largest Stocks in the United States to select from, NO STAIRS TO CLIMB, ELEGANT PASSENGER ELEVATOR. —_— - —2PRLVILL DLALVAIOR, ITI8 THE NAME OF THE TOWN WHERE Fine Healthy Homes, FOR ALL ARE FOUND ! Where They Can Enjoy Pure Air & Water! BEAUTIFUL SCENERY. Andall of the good and pleasant things that go to make up a com= plete and happy existence, The town of South Omaha is situated south of the city of Omaha on the line of the U. P. Railway. and it is less than 24 miles from the Omaha post office to the north line of the town site. South Omaha is nearly 14 miles north and south by 2} east and west, and covers an area of nearly four square miles, The stock yards are at the extreme southern limit, Nearly 150 lots have been gold and the demand is on the? increase The yards are being rapidly pushed to completion, The $60,000 beef packing house is progressing finely. The $30,000 Water Works are keeping pace with the other im provements, and the Hotel and Exchange Building will be erected at once, The B. & M. and Belt Line Railways have a large foree of men at work and will, in connection with the U, P, Ralway, have a union depot near the park at the northend of the town. Svitable grounds will be furnished for Church and School purposes. Now is the time to buy lots in this growing city. They wlll never be cheaper than they are to-day. “Apply at the Company’s office, cor. of 13th and Douglas streets over the Omaha Saving's Bank, M. A. UPTON, Assistant Secretary, W. L. WRIGHT, IMPORTER, JOBBER AND MANUFACTURERS' AGENT OF LEOckery, Glassware Lams, & 13TH ST., BETWEEN FARNAM AND HARNEY, OMAHA, - . - NEBRASKA, OMAHA NATIONAL BANK U, S. DEPOSITORY. J. H. MILLARD, Prosident, WM. WALLACE. Cashier, Capital and Surfilus, $450.000. OMAHA SAFE DEPOSIT VAULTS Fire und Burelar Proof Safes for Rent at from 85 to $60 per annum, roquired by the traveling pub. fiooa i, Quick 1 and the Lowt of' accommod @ tlous—all of which aro furn. And St. Paul. 1howns and operstes over 4,600 milos of ch all the great Lusiness centros of the ons r t and Far it naturally answors the t a0, Milwaukoeo, Enu Ciaire aud Stillwater: Chicaggo, Milwaukee, Wausau and Morrill [ Chicago, oh b, Chicago, Beloit Juneavillo and Mineral Polnt, Chlcago, Elgin, Rockford and Dubuque, Daveuport, Uslmar, 8¢, Pullway § 1t o world Fir .t Dining Cars in i lines of the CHICAGO, JL BAILWAY, aud evory teution iy courtéous eployen the Compan, 8. MERRILL, Gen'l Manager A V. H. CARPENTER, Gen' Voss. Agt, T, CLARK, Gon'l Supt Mk ad b BB RD, ABS'G Gou L, o aes, At Grerman ID. Wvatt; LUMBER MERCHANT Blinds, g o (R A 锑:‘ _ CUMINGS AND 20TH 8T, OMAHA, NEB, C. F. GOODMAN, Wholesale Druggist ! AND DEALER IN Paints 0ils Varnishes and Window Class OMAHA NEBRASKA,