Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 16, 1884, Page 2

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2 ())L\H.\ DAX The use of the term * Line” 1n_co 1 yrate nam oat conveys an idea of et wh requlred by the tra Tic=# Sh ne: Quick. Timi And ‘the Dest-of' secommodh " #—all of which are fars ehed by the groateet railway in Amorloa (xoaco, [jjiLwAUKEE And St. Paul. Thowns and operates over &600 milea of Northern Tiinols, Wisconein, Minnosots, Tows Dakota; and e ta main line nches and connee tlons reach all the great busines contres of the Northwost and_Far Wost, It naturally answers the description of Short Line, and Best Route betwoen Chioago, Milwaukes, St. Paul and i ) Milwaukee, La Crosse a: b Chioago, Milwaukes, Eau Claire an Chioago, Milwaukee, Wausau and Chicago, Milwaikeo, Beaver Dam and Oshkosh, Chioago, Milwaukee, Watkosha and Oconomowos. Ohioago, Milwaukee, Madison and Prairio du Chion Chioago, Milwaukeo, Owatonna and Fairibauli, Chloago, Beloit Janesvillo aad Mineral Polnt., Chloago, Elgin, Rockford and Dubugue. Chicsgo, Clinton, Rock Island and Codar Rapids. Chieago, Council Blufs and Omaha. Chicago, Sloux City, Sioux Fallsand Yankton Chicago, Milwaukee, Mitchell and Chamberlatn, Rook Ialand, Dubuqiie, St. Paul and Minneapolls. Davenport. “almar, St. Paul and Minneapolis. Pullman 8 eepers and the Finest Dining Cars In the wrld are run_on the main lines of the CITICAGO, MILWAUKEE AND ST. PAUL RAILWAY, and every attention is paid to passengers by courteous employes of the Company. A. 3.7, CLARK, Gen'l Supt. GEO. 1. HEAFFORD. Aw't. Gon'l. Pa_ Ach GOING VWIST. PRINCIPAL LINE CHICAGO, PEORTA & ST.LOUIS, OMAHA AND LINCOLN TO DEN Y WAY OF onr VA RKANSAS CITY AND ATCHISON to DENVER. Connecting in Union D 4 it Kansas City, Omaha and Denver with through trains for SN ENR A INICTISC! And all points in the Great West GOING IZAST. Conneeting in Grand € with throngh NEW YORK, n Dopot st Chicago ins for BOSMON, ~rn Cith Lt nd x 18 with' thro &Q. Tun daily tonnd from Chies 10 and § Chicagoand Con 1 Blutls: Chica Moing Top Tunning theis own Lincoln and Den City and [ and Chi hrough ¢ nver, AND 50U Solid Triing of it Day Pullinan Py i and from Kcokuk, Buri Leato St. Panl 1 with Reciining and Peorin. Only 1556 O CATS DELW e Bt Louis and Dos Moines, Tows, Lincoln, s brawska, and Denver, Colorndo 1t is'als0 the only Throtgh Lino heiween 8T, 8T, Louls, HINNEAPOLIS and ST, PAUL, A0 18 known a8 tho great TINE of America, and is uni Ted 1o be the Tinest Eqdpfiei Railroad in the World for classes of Travel, hhirough Tickots vin this line for salo at it . It coupon ticket oftices in the United States fadi wnada. T PERCEV A h Vice-Pre & Gin. Manacer 0 G boss ot ki Science of Life. Only $1.00 BY MAIL POSTPAID. HROUGH OAR ersully admit g frmew 'r,m Wi P B iy A G“EAT MEDIOAL WORA ON MANHOOD Exhausted Vitallty, Nervons and Physisal Dobllity "Promature Decline in Man, Errorsof Youth, an the unbold miserlos esulting trom Indiscrotions or ox 033908, A book for ovory man, young, middlo-sged, wad old. It contalns 124 prosoriptions for all aoute and nhronic disoasos 0aohono of whioh s Invaluablo 8> found by tho Author, whoss exporlence for 23 yours s auoh naprobably nover boforo foli to tho It of any physican 800 pagos, bound fn beantify ¥rouch muslin m oowsed covors, fall gllt, g narangend 3 bo & finor work n ovory sonse, —mochanionl, 1it eraty and professional,—than any other work sold in this country for §2.60, or the money will bo refunded 10 ovory fustanos. Prioo only 81,00 by mall, post: pald. Tlustrative sample 6 oents, Send now. Gold ruedal awarded the suthor hy the Natlonal Modical Assoolation, to the offioors of which he refors. Tho Sclonso of Lifeshould bo read by the young for \nstraction, and by the sftiioted for reliof, 1t will beuofih All.—Londan Lanoet, There 18 no membeor of socloty 40 whom The Sol- ence of Life will not be usctul, whethor youth, par: ent, gunrdlan, instructor or clorgyman. —Argonaut, Atldmfl the Peabody Modical [netitute, or Dr. W. rior, No. 4 Bulfinch Sireot, Boston Mass., whe : & Wt | EL[CTRIEM CURREhT\,. Iwr,;.".m.. Made in the ’h.tu.“l[, System, Signaling Under the Sea—The Motor of the Fature—An Electric | ftailway in Ircland. | Poieaveieiis, September 11,—*1 have just returned from Manchester by the sea, in the Massachusetts,” sald M. Alexander Graham Bell, the famous telephone inventor, to-day, ‘‘and don't know when I have suffered 8o from the heat. As a matter of course, I am here to attend the electrical exhibition and meotings of the association for the ad- vancement of science. During the last Mot ;n"%é’.‘h»".”,f,,’.’;,',“;,‘: twolve montha the acience of electricity T asnandowoeln |has received a greater impetus in foreign or e i \he, | countries than here, I Blood i purin The general impression, though, gyt yltisproncunced bY' | seoms to be the other way, Mr. Bell, is \ ADDE] doctors to be the ON= | it not!” {AND LY Guns teal | America in undoubtodly ahoad in the f§ URINALY | practical application of electricity to pur- - It is purely vores | poses of public utility, but in the most § GmAvEn hedicines il | important use to which electricity has DIABETES It prorared £x: | hitherto beon applied wo are vory much ! PATNS beon knawn to fail. | rope, that is l||u transmission of for l,y o Vinoo you. Forsale | means of electricity. A railway seven Sk by all drugeista. miles long 18 worked by electricity at 10INS PRICE $1.25, Post Rush in Ireland, A water-fall in stor Send e 1 | tho neighborhood i utilized to work the [RBvOUs of Tonti- 4 dynamo machine, and the current is s monials, 4\ | transmitted over a telegraph wire from HUNT'S The waste of NETENTION i the falls to the railwa; RO TN REMEDY | water-power in America, for lack of clec- e . sy trlcal apparatus totransmit it, is somo- 4 "’N'l:"rln. thing enormous. If the power of water- falls in places so inaccessible that it can- not b utilized could be transmitted forty or fifty miles to where it might be ap plied 1o advantage, all this power run- ning to waste would be saved, would be cheaper than cteam, and in the end pos sibly supersedo it.” THE TELEPHOE, “In regard to the telophone?’ ‘1 am now at work on the magneto- telephone and have obtained some satis- factory results, but of these the time has not yet come for mo to speak. 1 am do- sirous of improving the Central offico the yenr for aches | management, The business has grown buy ono of | 8o fast as to create a real difliculty in jng seuwil | handling it. It is a curious thing to con- sider that all the improvements introduc: ed in the telephone are not improvements of a permanent nature, simply additions Winter Is co and pains, In vie r. Horne's Floctrl soodman’s, 1110 Farn i dors filled ©.°0. B —— | to the systems introduced as a matter of its workings. The introduction of the ELEPHONE No. 144 on at present.” i expediency. This new growth has been []l- Ame“a Bu”flul enormous, and the systemisa very compli- l ' OFFIOE AND RESIDENCE! underground wire system necessitates tho modification of the system as it now ex- . “Is thero any limit to the distanco at BQGT OR which n message may be communicated ““Distanco ie a minor considoration, 1f thero were but ono wire on tho surface of the earth @ man might talk all the way ) | cated one. My aim is to try to simplify 1617 Dodge St, = Omaba. |ists. Thavis the problom I am engaged by telophone!” Db around tho globo. The multitudo of dis- o 517 St. Charles St St. Lonis, Mo, | turbing influences—telephone wires, at- ..'u. Gk, Nemoy "i7 | mospheric disturbances, and magnetic in- B vanirs Aty i Bt Aosis | i1 ences—overcome the telephonic ac- Prostration. Physical Weakness , Morcar : tiohs of Throat, Skin or Bones, Blood Polsoning, | *esistence as would be necessary to send Nervou Debinity, Mental and | tion, I have alroady overcome as much 1and other Affece y :m Sores and Ulcers, sl with uoparalloled | & NOREAZO around the world. I have Discases Arising Trom Indiscretion, Excess, | ta1ked through the bodies of thirty per- Exposure or Indulgence, which producs somo of tho | 5ons standing with their hands joined, U T | That was in England somo years ago, and there were some very distinguished peo- ple among the thirty. e BIGNALING THROUGIT THE SEA, ““Among the pepers that | will read before the association for the advanco- ment of acience to-morrow i one on a MARR'AGE GUIDE y [new method of i slgnaling between ves- 0 age nn e, o T, |sels at sea. 1t is done by means of the s (e | telophono, and 1 eannot at present foro- leaith, Besay, | tell what practical results it may lead to, Signals wero successfully exchanged be- ,,,,,, tween two boats in deep water a mile and a quarter apart, In one boat was a tele- phone with ono cf its two terminals hanging over the bow and the other trailing in the water over the stern, The arrangements were the samo in the other boat except that instead of a telephone it contained an electric battery, with an nny e Hew or by . Writa for que A Posmve wrnt-en Guarantee gy rywher, Pan Dages seribing abovo ukio, FRES. m Horlick's ful reother HORLICK TOOD 0K IN1 \\1 freo e or INFAN Dbont dic apparatus for interrupting the current pYs? B INVALTL iy 7‘-7\\ ficip) very rapidly, as often as 100 times in a b 0 b e A0 Jgecond. Every time the battery was | 10 anyhing of U connected with the water the latter be- camo charged, and whon the circuit was interrupted coased to be so, and & musi- cal note was produced in the telephone of the distant boat, These results were obtamed with a veryimperfect apperatus. The musical te could bo produced at will at difforent intervals, and we ar. rangoed an alphabet. A skillful operator could read » messsge communicated in this way with the greatest ease, In con nection with this invention 1 would say I b Wi e kent |+ g HORLIC &9 Uik Ho LDAL, PARLS BAKER'S: Brflakfasl HI wanted absolutely pur Gason ramichicliitho ox that the credit of its diacovery is not al 1 s b removed. 1L has together mine. 1€ Prof. Tvowbridge, of imes the strengtn of Cocon mised | Hlarvard college, had not had the idea of vith Starca, A1-owr and fx therefore far g Al 1 strengthening, nirably tor Suga |y galvanometer instead of a telophone, o cconom' | 4 of charging the water with a dynamo clectric machine in o similar way, the idea of applying the telephone for that purpose might not have occurred to me, The professor thought that in this way vessels might discover their proximity to apted for nvalide well us for persons in healtl Nold uy Grocers evorywhers £ oocaaited on all dtscasos roquirtag wkill and 00, Olironic and obetinatodisom. wthat h Kill of sll other phys. olant alty, Buoh treated “fi&%l‘tm’ an fostance fallure, VIGOR Bon e SNl ptionn Now vk 8. H. ATWOOD Plattsmouth, - - Nen. BRNADER OF THOROUGHBRED AXD HIOH GRADN HEREFORD AND JERSEY CATTLE AND DUROO OB Illll' RED BWINE #o Voun stook R. RlceM D. CAN UEBS e pthee Sumars repored bR 00 CHRONIC DISEASES ot inds o spoctat. Over hirty years praciioal experionce Oftoe No. Pear troct, Councll Blufly @ Cononliation free B STRCK PIAND HAS NO UPERIOR, The Steck is a Durable Piano. THE STECK HAS SINGING QUALITY OF TONE FOUND NO OTHER PIANO, BOLD NLY BY WOODBRIDGE BROS., 718 OPERA BOOSE, .~ OMAHA NEF, each other during a fog. Nearly all steam vessels have dynamo-electric ma chines to produce the electric light, This machine could bo used to charge the wa- fl[s’[onfiu. ter when tho steamer runs into a fog, uprudeioe, chcelng narvous such as one always finds ofl' the coast of . Davehgster, Hass munuoqn A victim of earl (A E A y i s | Newfoundland, and would give the elecs neans of suif-vurs, woich b FREK to to it.” e — CONVINUING The proof of the pudding is not in chowing the string, but in having an_ovportunity 5 test the articlo direct, Schroter & Becht, the sts, havo a freo trial bottle of Dr.” Bo. sunko's Cough and Lung Syrup for each and every one who is afflicted with Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Consumption or any Lung Aflection C— The Oldest american Olty, Two years ago Santa Fe celebrated what its citizens claimed to be the ter- centennial —the d - anniversary of its foundation; thus placing it as the old- est city settled by Kuropeans on the continent. St. Augustine, Florida, was to have celebrated its 319th anniversary during the present mouth, but this has been postponed until March 27th of nex! year, which date will also by the anni versary «f tho landing on the easter coust of Ponce de Leon, in 1512, aud, as hey cluim, the first settlement in the United States. Theclaim of Santa Fe tc eniority has always been vigorously de nied. ciflo for 1y slons, Fits, Nervous Neuralg Prostration caured by the uso of aloohol or tobbaceo, Wakefulooss, Montal dopression, Softening of the rosulting in_iosanity and feaplog to misery, and , Promatiire Old age, Haronoss, los of power Tavoluntary Lossos aud Bper orho ‘over excrtiuntof the brain, selt o OF Kenco, Ka ., containd one onth's §1.00al six bottles for £6.00, sent by mafl prepaid on recolpt of price. WE GUARANTEE SIX BOXE To cure any case. With each order recoived by us v #1x bottice, accomplishad with 85 60, wo will send the purchaser'our written guaranteo to rofund the Ly 1 the treatmentdoos 10t eect a oure. Guar seued only by JOHN C: WEST & CO., wiery i, 02 Madison Bt., Chica, TTCES HAVAN GOULD & CO!'S. upap 3y " Exciem e Royal Havana Lottery ! | wut causes thegreat vk st Schroter & (A GOVERNMENT INSTITUTION.) l;- hit ~1‘|Iw.n~“: s Tho freo Ml Lm“m n Drawn at Havana, l uba, Every 12700 Syeuy. Akt A0 DILEA pae to 14 !).134 A Colils, Consumption and Bronchiti TICKETS, $2.00, . HALVE warket, I ] W cent Rubect o no manivulation, not controlicd 00 | mcan— Ber tlevators, Wiy 1o the SHIPSEY 1t i tho falros Vavw Now York ¢lova'ors carried a hundred willion people last year, or more than the clevated railrcads, Paseenger elevators or Frauk Lobrano, L D, 20 Wysudotte, Kau. 1y 2lamke & wly .Y BEE tric signal to any vessel dangerously near | TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16. nd the rican_invent the gu s from become naturalized in i Carolina rich in countries of Kutope, in la tion t ¢ ure. | largest sievators are those of the Man \an the present entire | | hattan storage company, messuring The plant can bo| !feet in wedth and twenty in ler rais casily as Tudian corn, It is | wh the produce exch is | four times mora pr. tive than cotton, | the most expensive, the nine cars casting | and takes only one-tenth as much labot | 260,800, The elevators in the greal to raiseit. The preparation of the plant 5,000 per. | for manufacture——the separation of the daily average fibre from the woody parts—can be as being 12.000. he elevator used for |cheaply accomplished by Americon ma beilding the Washington monument is |chinery and chemicals, as by the cheap nine feet square, runs to height of | hand labor of India. And in proportion 25 feet, and has a lifting capacity of | as the product is increased, the manufac- ten tons, Bureaus of inspection in many | tories will also increase; the manufactur- cities help to insure the safety of passen- | ers of Dundee, rtland, whose jute mills er elevators, but constant care is neces- [in 1578 employed 30,000 hands, stand saty to prevent accidents. ' ready to remove to the United States the — moment they are convinced of the suc- The Arsenal ar Kian h | cess of the new industry. All these facts An extensive arsenal has been created | and others as important, Prof. Water- at Kiagn-Nan, near Shanghai, where|house has elaborated on paper which, on some of the ablest practical engineers of | different occasions, he has been asked to Europe, and America can produce have [ prepare for the government agricultural for yoars been engaged in introducing |department, machinery and imparting instruction. In His general conclusion is embodied in 1806 pursuant to a contract between Mr. | words as follows: “No vigor of language P. Giquel and Vieeroy Tso of Fuhkeen | can too earnestly exprees my conviction Province, the former was made sole di |that a great industry, productive of vast rector of the projected Foo-Chow arsenal | opulence, now awaits the hand of south- and almost immediately left for England | ern enterprise. The lapse of time has to engage teachers for the schools, work- | strengthened my belief that the southern men for the shops and founderies, and to | states can by organized effort, produce a purchase engines, machinery, etc., being | new vegetable fibre which, ranking next amply supplied with funds for the pur- [to cotton in value, will not only enrich POREH NAm e The ground selected tor | themselves, but also increase the textile the site of the arsenal has a pad- | resources of the world, dy field near Pagoda Anchorage.| Ifsouthern enterprise in this new di- To make it avalable it was | rection is developed, the spur to its de- found necensary to raise the whole five |velopment, as has been the cage in num- feet by filling in with dirt. and 13,718, | horless instances heretofore must be 0 cubic feet cf earth were dupuni':d Northern capital. The north also has over an arca of some forty acres. The | this additional special and selfish interest work on the arsenal proper commenced | Increased production of jute will incroase in October, 1867, and was prosecuted | jute manufactories; and such manufac- with great vigor, In 1870 the foreign | turing cities as are most allve will share employes numbered fifty-seven | with live southern cities in the new in- including one;director, one civil e | erease of factories. And north and south one surgeon, five professors, tw have the general interest in this *‘new taries, two accountants, two draughts-|dopartare” which proceeds from a patri- men, thirteen foremen, and twenty-eight | otic desire to sce greater diversity of artisans, a large majority being French- products and employments, men. ‘The schools of engineering and of | It is a fact of history, and axiomatic, theoretical and practical navigation were | that “‘tho prosperity of nation has always taught in Koglish, while the designing | declined in proportion to the limitation echoo), the school of n congtruction & | of their employments,” chronometer echool, with the aepartment | it for apprentices in _ the various | LIST OF LETTERS shops, were taught by 8IX| Remaining unea + Omaha post French professors and their assistants. | ofiice up to September 13th, 1854 The preparation of the ground was an GENTLEMEN'S LIST immense work, and the ercotion of tem- | A qcock J DI, Mills building have carried sons in a single day, the porary h\uhlmgu involved much expense 1 Alsin A I I\‘|~ n A \\ 1t and labor, and the results achieved in so | Burk W A brief a time showed wonderful enterprise | Bridge ch Co on the part of Mr, Giquel and the chief | Yes BT '.‘””““" Beckelhammer T Joyde H mandarins in charge. In the year above | /ey Cy Ml mentioned the temporary arsenal com- | pirur I dle A prised a workshop in which models were | Buvter C s 1 made, several steam-saws, a machino. | Bruhel J 1 Broderson J Q shop, a foundry, a forge with thirty.one | Cicorand B Collison 'L, arpenter 1 W Cluir W fires, & boiler and copper-ware manufac- | (TS GelatiolL W, tory, a brick kiln, a lathe-shop, a great | Cook W Champeny Wi forge with two furnaces, n steam-ham- | Conklin T Cuno It 1" mer of two tons’ weight, and an iron roll- : ‘”M'h|: p “‘]“ ”’ CB ing machine capable of rolling plates an | Creswell: oleril L, g P! ! Oonroy Collition G inch thick, all in active and successful | (007 %) \1g operation. Besides, there were four | iy W Davidson P L slips for shipbuilding, residences for the | Dickinson H 1T Dyjan J director ond teachers, warchouses, | Daily J 1T : ; buildings for foreign and Chi- pe] Emenherser G nese laborers, In addition n 3 LS . o 8 sman Frahm 11 to 120 Chinese sailors in tho service, and | ;1 W N 500 soldiers occasionally detailed from iile ) 132 Green H W Gaunnel A A the camp near by, no less than 1,500 na- ay H Gilman H C tive carpenters, smithy and coolies were employed on the premises. The total ex- | 111DV €2 L penditure of the works amounted to|jj, "'m S BRuEhUL Huffschmidt 1t 50,000 taels, orabout £70,000 per month. | Harkell R 13 Hicke The first transport Was launched the 10th | Hilferty J Hill T of June and in six months a gunboat fol- | Heartt ¢ IHams H Heaton 11 Hunt 1T lowed. Since the completion of the per- manent buildings, unless the expecta- tions of the director have been disap- | pointed, the government works at Foo- Chow have been able to furnish cach year threo engines and as many ships, Thero [ Rink O )2, is o third and somewhat smaller arsenal | oi0P 1 at Tient-sin, Lambert R L LombardiiD | ——— 2 tle 1 Johnson P Junken ohuxon It J Jonson W 1) na G Jones G Jolmson I Jhur L) Junson A] Kink 0.3 Kennedy W H Keeler 11 A H A New Industry, Listerd s From the Milwaukee W nsin, \I”"Vfl':l’" } T Tho men are rarely found who with no |yt 1t A 4 Marlon 1§ hope of reward direct or contingent, con- | \lcGirath 1y Mulvihill CJ sent to give time and effort and money | Mason 1 Morton Ej in furtherance of any purely public good. | May 15 Monrol M But some wen are sometimes mot and | Muzan 1 wow i Murray J one of them recently visited Milwaukee. | o\ i} o ST I'ho object of his visit was to interest | Nolson 1° business men and capitaliist in the sub- |0 O'Connar O J of jute cultivatien and manufacture [ i O'Hearn J as purely American industric | : o H 2 IK“-‘&'(-r T A "Lhe jute plant, as is known to thoso | i1 T L EAlE o who know anything about it, ranks next | pollaci 15 Pike W to cotton among vegetable fibers, inits [ Poters.) commercial importance and value. In|lichy T I the manufacture of fabrics it is mixed [ 1liuer Brick Co with cotton snd linen and sik, and s a i material part of twilled stair-carpetings | Sonrel and low-priced broadeloth, By itself, or | Secley mixed with other substances, it enters | Shaniy Stever into almost numberless articles of com- | Stein H Smith ( worce, and thero is hardly a reader of the | S0t 1211 Boreena Wisconsin who might not, if an expert, [ Sclide W1 F Wil detect the presence of jute in s0omo one | Ssuwvelson 1 W of the garments which ‘he or she wenre, |1 R Ihomus 12 W As far back as 1870, 19,000,000 pounds of | Thompsen 5.9 Throacek ) an Antwoerp T 12 2 Wheelen I W T Weehillo T 12 jute were imported into the United States and manufactured at a prolic of 2,000,000, And in 1882, in the baling [ Walkindaw 3 W Wicland J D of the American cotton crop alone, 200,- | Wisticld J T Waood 000,000 pounds of jute werg used. Wisne: Wilsy (; Thus as an article of manufacture, | 30115 1L A Young WD American business entorprise has already [y ! ol A given to the jute plant a tangible rec ognition. But of jute as an article which t will pay to produce as well as. to.manu sacture, the people of the Unitd: 3t.te have yet much to learn. And the self appointed task of Prof. Waterhouse- who is above referred to as having re- cently visited Milwaukeo—is to vince the American people thab jute, as an agricultural product and staple may be made to prove incaloulably more im- portant in augumenting tho country’s general wealth than jute considered us an article of manufacture merely, and imported., Twelve yeara ago, while visiting in In- dia, Prof. Waterhouse (who is professor of Greek in 'Washington university, St Louis, and who has become almost world-famous as a scholar aud a practi- cal student of public uessions), first gave serious attension to the subjecy of jute-raising. He discovered that India, | Ko the present sole source of the wozld’s | Luce supply of juto, was getding 100,000,000 | 4 peryear for this single product., He |\ Py N discovered that such vash income and | feliord Miss M profit were yielded in spite of the fact | Mills Mixs O lhnt Tudian‘methods of eultivation and [ Moore Mrs 5 3 preparation fir market were the crudest | M Mies M possible. He discovered that the plant LADIE LIsT, Mr € Schmidg Mrs J D Roney W C Dickey J 1 Atkinson {8 10 Ayr H Sitch Mas © A Campbell Mrs O Barsum Mrs G 3 Corwin Mrs J n- | Cunniamond Mg M Eagherly M Fair Mes 1 Frank I Gralian Miss C Sosdike Mrs 1, Fitegarald Mis: wiz Miss 1L an Miss L Gray Miss F ard Miss 15 Held Miss AJ n Greon Mrs J Hull Mrs Hall Miss B ¢ Hoglund Mrs A Hendeson Mrs W Hyde Miss 5 Hubbard Mrs & Tohoson Mes H Jensen Miss A Ingals Mrs M huson Mrs C Ines Mrs J E MA Kerrig: Miss on Mrs G W IKane Mrs 1, Killoren Miss M ln Mi aird \I|~4 AC Mobr Mes Monteith Mrs 1, Moulton Miss K It Martin Mrs H Mitchell | MeDonald M MeCoy Mrs 1 was hardy: that a ksilure of the ¢ rop o1 Molan Miss 11 account of unpropitions weatber condi- | Pett s A {ewit Mrs K tious was practically unknown; and tha I J Sheely Mrs J the growing jute, by reason of 1ts acrid b Mrs 17 D juce, was proteeiod lutely from 8 tack or injury by iusect pests. ke noted fivally that a warm, humid el | Tyteust ) mate was bost adapted to the suceeseful [ | ¥ cultivation of jute then he came T 4 “5 P America, During the twelve years which have since elapsed, he, and others inspired by his strong convietion, have econductcd systematic experiments in the cultivaticn of jute ia the southern states, ho con lusions which have been reached, rather, ho absolute demonstrations that have JAS, B, PEABODY M, b, PHYBICIAN & SURGEON, uce No. 1407 Jones §t, Oftice, No. 1600 t. Ofice hours 12 m. to 1 p, m. kud rom 2 phone for oftice ¢7, v 1 ‘Th ¢ Gencral Westoan Agonts, 107 Wash 1 i it Wor v 1 rmitte , Lack of Encrey, &o., it has , 25~ The genuine bas above trade mark and erossed red lines on wrapper, - Take no other, Bade ouly by BROWN CHENICAL ¢ ALTINORE, 30y Proposals for[Street Aprons, Sealed pr als will be received by the unders! ed ntil lock noon of Saturday, Septemter the 97th, 1584, for the furnishing to the city of one hun- dred’or more wouden nprons for strcot crossige; such aprons to bo constructed in_accordance with eamples now on Dodge strect, at southwest corner of Fifteenthstreet, and » in accordance with such further suggestions as the chairman of the ¥ d ot Public Works may make previous.to presentation of bids. B'ds to be accompenied by tha signaturcs of pro. pesed sureties who, in the cvent of the awarding of the contract. will enter intobonds with the city of Omaha, in the sum of five hundred dcllars, for the faithful execution of such contrac The Board of Public Works re reject any or ail b rves the ight to e TAMES CREIGHTON, Chatrman Board of Public Works, 1113-16.10 aEmA s Power. 1 compla s will EE%’%Summer Resun Of the Northwest, Detroit, Minn A country of WOODS AND LAKES, 200 miles wost Paut, Tareo traius doily on 30 Day Excursion. HOTEL MINNESOTA, An clegant house with_accommodations for 200 guests. ~ R. R. COLBURN, Proprietor. LATSEND FOR CIRCULARRGIVING FULL PARTICULARS. C. A WILSON.M.D. (Faculty Prize Medical Gollege of Ohlo, PILES, FISTULA, And other Discases of the Anus and Rectum. 120 8. 14th St. Cor. Douglas OMAHA, ovo edand wtf HAMBURG-AMERICAN Fracliet Comapany. (RECT LINE FOR ENGLAND, FRANCE AND GEIMANY. Tho steanships of this wel ron, In water-tight compart d with_every requ aafe and agroeable aud European mails, luys and tor ry tho Unitc ke Thurs ONDON) Cher it Cabin, 8 adt, Mark Hoi agenteln Omaba, G ouncil Bl Auts., 01 Brovdway, N, Y. <ol NEERISI(A LAND AGENCY 0. F. DAVIS & 60., SUCCESSOR TO DAVIS & SNYDER,) Genera Deslers in REAL ESTATE 1506 FARNAM ST, + OMAHA. Have for sxle 200,000 acres carefully selocted landi B Kastoru Nebrask, ut low prico and on chay terms Tmprovea tanna for salo in Douglas, Doage, Colfea Piatto, Burt, Cuming, Sorpy, Wasnington, Merick caunders, and Butler Jountiva. Taxes pald in all parts of tho State, Money loaned on improved ferwe, Notary Fublicalways 1o office ot Correspondence 1T 18 NOT THE SWIFT SPECIFIO CO. M. Y. Offs, 169 W. 224 b o 1 Atiaata, 224 by Avenues. Philadel Jhia Owing tothe increase | |in our business we've admitted to the firm Mr EdwinDavig,who is well and favorably knownin Omaha.This willenable us to han- dle an increased list of property. We ask those who have degi- rable property for sale, toplace the same with us, The new firm will be & i REAL ESTATE BROKERS. 213 South 14th St

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