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A THE EARL OF AYLESFORD. Remaikable Carcer of an Beglish No- bl man Who Fled frim Heme, Wi AL i Famous Scandals W.ich Startle Aristoc ¢ Circles in Rarope— ral Halls Avsndoncd for Nefage on a Texan Ranch — Loss of & Familiar Face. [ 8¢, Louis Glube-Democrat, 15th, The body of the late earl of Aylesford, ranch-owner, and at one time a saloon keeper at Big 8 Tox., who died at the Springs on sy night, will er. rive in St. Louis to-morrow. It will be recoived at tho union depot by a local undertaker, who will embalm it and ehip it to New York, from which point it is to be forwarded for intermentin Eog- land, The deceased oarl has beeu con. nected with the cattle Industry for two or three yeors paat. to wes well known all over the section of Texas in which his in located, and in faot by his cow- oy-like freoks had becomo hotorious thronghout the state, During the time he was located at Big Springs he made frcquent visits {0 St. Louis, and became woll known to men around fown and fre qnenters of the Southern hotel rotunda. He visited England tn the epring of last year, and derlng his stay in Now York was intorviowed by a roporter, to whom be exprested himself in favorablo torms 88 to his life and surroundings in the west, In Eogland, and in London soclety par- ticalarly, the Earl of Aylesford's death will recall the famous divorce oourt pro- ceedinge in which the Earl and his Coun- teas aud the Marquis of Blandford. now the Duke of Marlborough, eppeared in tha most unenvishle light. The Esrl was tha eighthof his ancestor. the grent Ias yer, Honerge Ninch, by Gecrgze 1., in 1714, Ho was born in Fobruary, 1849, and ruccoeded to his father's title and to the sas noumbered family estates in o1c of the oastern counties of England in January, 1871, Two days bsfoie his fatber’s death tho Farl, who was then Lord Guerasey, martied Edith Peer Williame, the deughter of a Berkshire Colonel and a member of the house of Commone. DT RRATONY 4nd Ondispated ta the BROAD GLAIN TERY BEST OPERATING, QUICEEST SELLING AND MUST PERFEGT COORLAG $707T Eiver offered to the publie, HAMBURG-AMEBICAW FPaclxot JODAIDRILT. DIRECUX LINE FOR ENGLAND, FBAKCE AND GERMANY. ‘Ths stonmshiys of thiy well-) tron, fa wator-(gh compartments, nud aro furnish- ad with overy roquisite to mnko 'tho pasage both and agreeable, Thy eany (0o United Stuise poan and foavo Now York Thurs- nd Haturdaya for Plymzonth (LONDOX) Chor. arg, (PARI) and HAMBURG. etng e HOBNOBBING WITH ROYALTY, At that time and for some time after ward the Earl was on ipstimate terms with the Prince of Weles, as is shown by the fact that the Prince stood sponsor for his recond daughter, wh> was born in 1875. It was eoon after the birth of this child that the proceedings iathe Dovorce Court were commenced. 1t was then shown that Liady Aylesford had conduct- ted an intrigue with the Marquis of Blendford, Lord R. Churchill's elder brother and heir to the Marlborough dukedom. Thore wers facts sufficient to owa line ars buiit of Briss: Hioorags {fom Earopo ouly $18. Firs | Werrant the granting of a decres nisi but u-xhln.ulg.s?l{nfi«zrgl Bteorage, the Queen’s Proctor intervened. oD O Broneee s Bohsoaar ootk |1t was shown that the Ksrl had agentalo Omsha, Gronower & Sohoontge ouncil Blafts, ' C. B: RICHARD & 00., Ge: Aga., 61 Brozdway, N, V. Cbas, Kozminokl & Co- Geners! Waatara Agonta, 170 Washington 8¢, Ghioa EAL TS Rt Ristiny P - Avictim of youthful imprudence oaupiuR Frematare Docay, Nervous Debility, Lost enipod, e, having tried in vain every Known AT simple m self-cure, which $o wiil send FREE to his follow_sufferers, Addres:. . H.REEVES, 43 Ohothani StuNew Yo been seriously misconducting himself with o lady of high rank, aod as_the outcome of the Proctor’s intervention, and on the ground that there had been collusion, the court refused the order. The hearing of the e1se occupied the court for a number of days, and furnished the most sevsa tional reading matter for the daily jour- nals. 1t exci'ed the most intense inferest throughout Enuland and on the continent, ng to the standing of the two great avistocratic families _immediately con- cerned. The Duke of Marlborough, then the Marquis of Blandford, and subse- quently member of parliament for the Marlborough fami y borough, had some eight or nine years previous to tho action, Nervous Debility S i s g Health is Wealth | (EDB. E. 0. Wasr's Naare axp Budin TRuasuunr, a uaraatued apociflo for Hyaserls, Dizxinow, Convals slons, Fits, Norvous Nouralgia, Hoadacho, Nervous Prostiation oaused by $ho use of aloohol or $0bbacco, Waketulness, Moab osalon, Sottening of the ‘raln, resulting i lasantby And. leaping. So. ralsery, dooay and d romburo Old ag, Baroasss, 1o otpower 12 eithor esx, Involuntary Lossos and Spor- » atorhoracaused by over oxertlontof tho brain, solf. abuse or over Indulgonce. Each box, oontains one mont menk. 8100 & box,or six bottles o #5.00, 820t by mall propaid on recolph of prics. WE GUARANTEE SIX BOXES o oure any case Wil tor six bostlos, acoomplished with 86,00, ho parshaser our wribten guaranteo £ rotund moaoy 11 hotreatment dooa nok effect a ouro. Guar- aatosalasuod only by JOEN O: WEST & CO. By $8-mo-ry /i 892 Madlson SL., Chicago, 11,5 ilton, the sixth daughter of the Duke of Abercorn, Ea'lof Mount Edgecomb. radical weekly Lonoon press: made: con- siderablo political capital out of the di- vorce proceedings, tarcastically empha- sizing the facs that each of the mnobla lords who figured so ignominiously in the case would in due tims take his seat in the house of lords, and that_each had in Lis gift quite a number of church livings called to appoint incumbent Having failed to secure the decre i, which would have been welcome to each party, Earland Lady Aylesford mutually agreed to sej 0, AN APPROPRIATE MOTTO. aclice, Scminal 5, Fimples on cured. There ciate re.ed: Guardians were appointed for ths two daughters of the mardage, and by an greement made in May, 1877, the then notoricus couple perceded to act up to the motto «f the Aylesfo d cutcheon— ““Aperto vivere vo o—'o live with will un- fettered Under the agreement the earl was to allow s wife $5,500 a year on the condition that she was not to molest him For a year o iwo the Aylesford family matters ceased to troublethe courts. There were, however, from time to ti graphy in the society journals ¢ wheteabouts and daings of the k, ugly umors we e in_civaula ion ‘he West End as to 1he posirion of Aly:s- ford with regard to the Marquis of Bland- fo:d. In 1882 the earl of Aylesford se- cured an ac: of parliament avho:izinghiny to raise abous 1wo nnd a half millions cf dol ars on the fam a‘es, in order 10 pay off his indebtedness aad invest ina ranch in Texas. About two yea's later, in Fobruary, 1884, the courts were agzin the scene of a bitter conflict between the ea:l and his discarded wife. Mr. C. Fearon, a London attorney, who had been appoint ed Lady Aylesford’s trustee under the 1877 separation agieement, sued tho earl for $2,410 a rears of the $2,600 anwuity, to- geiher with interest. ‘The defendent dis- puted the claim and put in a coun er-clai for damages sustained th-oughthe action of Lady Aylesfod. The case camo pbefore Mr. Justice Day, and was con inued for soveral days. Lady Aylesford and the Cuke of Ma Ihorough, the against his inclina ion, we o called as wit. nesses, Address . 2anviashinglon S.,Chicags, 1t SIS TR TR Imported Beer L% BOTTLES, v rreeseessess Bavaria ...Bavaria ++e 000 Bohomian, +seee.Bramen, Erlangsr, i Culmbacher, <o o Pilaner..... DOMESTIC, Bodweiaer.eeeseessees .8t Louis, Anhausor. . s s cee—w—-8t. Louis, F 1T T pp— Milwaukee. Bohlite-Pilsner——. . .. Milwaukee, Krug's seens ++.Omaha. Ale, Porter, Domestic and Rhige Wine, YD, MAURER, 1818 Farnam St. A FINE LINE OP Pims & Dran —AT— WODDBRIDGE BROS, THE ONLY EXOLUBLVE BIUSIE HOUS IN OMAHA NEB RECKLESS OF REFROOF, For the dofendant it was contended that the annuity wes grants d on the con- dition that ho was not molested by his wife, It was iusicted that he had been wo'ested by her Inasmuch ay Lady Ayles ford, 1a sddition to living with the duke of Marlborough, had, as a result of adul. terous relations, given birth to a ohlid, The ohild was bor in Paris i November, 1881 It was reglstered in that city under the nem> of Guy Bert- rand, but was openly called by the serv- ants and othere ia Lady Ayleeford's em plog “‘Lord Gurnsey.” The tiile biron of ‘Guernsey was conforred on the cele. beated Henesge Finch by Qaeen Arac prioe to his belng crea'ed a pece by George I, end has always been tha cour- married Lady Albertha Frances Ham: |ogo and has frequently renewed. By bis_marriage lie became | character and record of the young duke brother-in-law to Lord (laud Hamilton, |do not beheve that he will be man member for the city of Liverpool; Lord | enough to redeom his pladge, and that George F. Hamilton, member for the|he never moant to make Lady Aylesfor county of Middlesex; Lord Lansdowne, | his duchess. the present governor general of Canada; | was a boon companion oZLiord Aylesford the Earl of Litchfield: Lord Dalkeith, the |and eponsor for the younger of his two son of the Duke of Buccleuch, and the | daughters, is said t> be much affected Ly The ultra- | he carl’s sadden death. for which he would from time to time te| a How Eenator Groome Won & Wifo by From an Interview, didate for governor of my state, o gen- tleman_ in o peighborlng \own, where 1 chanced to bo, said that he would cpposy mo on the ground the1 wai a bachelor, looking man in the world, ani had never heen mariied;, so, to silence him, I said in jest that I would bet him a hat 1 sould find & lady inei wko would marcy me, and that wa peteer, 1 was eure, than he could do, 1 _4 .| succended in baeking him down, but Iy 1 | 29t 1mto another diiiculty. TRICKS OF MACHIN teay title ¢ ing the lifetime ¢ " . v the defe: | Ldy Aglertord ve| 16 Uracoonutale Stops aud Star court. I s eohd rand’a nura | Which Pazzle ing passy 1 think it best that you . shoold know that his mother's name isfp i | Lady Agleeford snd not Mvs. Spencer, motive's Quesk Freaks-. Wa{GH a8 1led you to believe, and Mr. Spencer, gines and tachines whota you have eeen, is Lord Blandford, That Have Only Necdod a the father of tho child.” The earl of Little Rert, Aylesford, through his sttorney, con tended that throngh the boy having been —_— represented as his eon and heir he had J2C | Philadelphia Times. been compelled to obfa'n a second act of o Th a wel ro aro times,” #al parlisment authorizing him to sell his inist yesterday, *ahen nearly all property, and that in coneequenco he had | yachines got ceanky, ‘The trouble is loat §75,000 by the delay and extra X |often a simple one and is not infiequent gt ly owing to the machinist not knowing his businces, But this is not slweys the u |case. The very bost mechanio gets hold t- | of & nut sometimes that 18 difficult to crack. A machine, no matter of what kind, msy work perfeotly for monthe, and then one day something gota wrong with it, The machinist looks at it, ex amines it, perhaps oven tekes it to THE CHA There were lcng and wearisome ments as to what the the torm ‘‘m ation” implicd, For the earl of Ayles. ford it was contended that Lady Ales- ford's action in allowing the boy to be called by the courtesy title of the family was calculnted to *‘disturb, trouble, vex OF MOLESTATION, ine onthe ov renton safe- ty minates frr { was ranulog his usu li N . He t . , the llne oi Il 1old Jake the brake and tuened the steam ‘clear,’ the ball rang, ook “Jake thought the train was heavy, #o he backed it a little to galn an impetus, Then ho pat on the ateam full nanin to go forward, but the cld engine gicked again, snd the driving-wheel ain, but the train vor moved, Jake got mad at last and got off the cab to look for the tromble. - He shouted to the fireman to turn cn steam, His order was obeyed, and without tha elightes troublo the e ded out of the atation as if sho were on & soaped board. Jake was s> worried about it that it proyed on his mind, and about six months after ho resigned hio posi tion. I haven’t the lers: 1dea the matter, but I guess Jake had fergot ten something that ho cucht to heve picces, and puts it up again, but all of no avail; the machine rema ns like a balky horse, which nothing will make go. Iast the machinist gots tired and goes home, sick of pottering with the trouble- somo thing, “‘Ho comes to work the next dag, per- haps having forgotten tte previous trouble, touches a handle here, s wheel janship of the Dowager duchees of Marl there, drops a lit:lo oll in half a dozen borovgh, Littlo was heard In England | placer, turns on 1h> ateam 0 of the late oarl after ho settled in Texas, | goes withont a murmur, as if nothing had Now and sgsin n paragraph appeared in{ ever happened. No, 1 can't explain it-- the papers, telling of his horse-riding and | neither could he. Tho only concluticn his frontior exploite, and to thcss who [to bs drawn is that ho omitted on tho know hia career the news of his death at|ocoasion cf the stoppage thore little and rendor uneaey” her husband, The judge held that tubstantial injury had 1 done the carl, and finally a verdiot wos retarned in his favor. A fow months later the Lady Alesford’s param- our becams tha duke of Marlborough The duke i3 still seperated from his wife, the Duchess, and his elder son and heir to the dukedom is now under the guard. ho age of 36 will be rcocived with no |necessary touches of tho handles, turn- [lays the intonsa itching, (partisularly at night | vhich at one time i ng warm in bod,) ackas a poultioe, | worlk Ry ing of wheals, aud droppings of «:1, Bu thero aro o(hor cases of u slightly diftor- ent nature, “For mstance, I had an order a little whilo az0 to make a prper ocutting Big Springs announcing the death of the | mA¢ hine from a certain pattern. 1 made onrl of Aylesford, which occurred on|if. When it was put to work it was Thuesdey night, rcquesting him $o come | foued to cut the paper with a carvo in- on thefirat train and bring a motalli |stend of eiraight. Now, of euree, I csgo for the remaine, which will be om- | 20nld remedy that by a mcchanical ap- bymod and shipped to England. The |Flicatlon, and did, ° However, 1 aiso deceased camo to this country about|Went to work end made sncthar mac three yeara ago and invested largely in | cxactly liks the firetin every respeot lands and stook in wes: Texas. Lost year | Tho second mackine is perfeoily success: ho revisited England, and while return. [fol. = Yet if you take {ha two mahin ing from the Derby races had a misun. | to pieces and place overy picco of ¢ detstanding snd oufle with tho police, | mschino alongeide of the”other il in which ono of his legs waa badly frac. | turo to s1y there is not a Falc's broadth tured. Ho roturned to this country seon | of difforence in them. I can't acccunt aflor, and._up to ths time of his death | £or tho difliculty with the firat. Tonly made Big Springs his headquarters. He|know kow to overcoine 1t, aud I did was_zather wild, {hongh possessed_of | overexme it. g00d impulses, and drank freoly. His| ‘Now, here is a case ofa trouble B hid T with an ‘instrament, the mechanism of which I wan not very well acjuainted with. A thort time sgo ny telephone 7 is | wouldn’t work. I couldu's converee deatior %‘:xfif‘l‘,,fif“f Y, e [{lirougl it at all. The only thing T hewrd and speculation here. Ho spent three ;&8 & terribio buzziog nss. I called up montha in England last yeor, and signal-| the uperator atthe central sfation, but he ized his visit by a row at a railway sta- 'couldn’t ascount for it, snd sent a man tion, during which he Bad a leg broken, around. He came and looked at the in- and by the sale of his country estatos at | SFUmEnt, got connected with the central Aylesford, near Maldatone, in Kent, |80 went away. — Presently I wanted Lady Aylesford left his_home in 1876 for | 0 e it agaln, but I found fhe the protection of the Marquis of Bland- trouble was as tad a3 ever. A. socond great sarprise. Special Dispateh to the Globe-Democrat, Daruas, Tex., January 14,—An un- deriaker horo received o telegram from ok n- Loxvoy, January 14, —The eudden and off she | yy done, and the ireman just told to let her go, went through the propir bu Jakoe th-ught the engine was bowite and died in that beliaf.” B PILES! P NO ONE A sure eure for E Ulcorated Piles has been o \\:Hlimlu }Au Indisn Reme: calle B, ng, Ttching and| vored by Dr. what was [ — Dr.| ¥ w's Tadian Pilo Ointment A single as oured the worst chrenio cases of 25 or box 80 years standing, ing medicine, Lutions, instruments and elec- tuaries do more harm than gwed, William's Indiau Pile Olntment absorbe the tumcrs, al* after got give nt relief, and ia propsred only for Pilos, itching of ‘the private parts,.and for nothing else, Road what the Hon, J. M, Coffinbs vy, of Cloveland, says about Dr, Wiillsm'a Indian Pile Oointment: *“T have need esoros of File Cures, and it affords mo pleasuro o say Shat T have never found anything wh ave such immedinte aud permanent_ reliof n8 Dr. Wil- lism'’s Indian Ofntment. For anl3 by ug gists and mailed on recaipt of price, and 8L Sold at rotail by Kuba MA, o Agent. LEQTES LT List of lettors remaining in ¢ y 165h, 1885, TTTRVAN'S LIST' Anderson WK daaab o postoflics Jan . Anderson A G Adams O 8 ) Bragg A Reach G W Black G K Baylan J Bengtion K Belding T W Bagin 1 vd A Burns Brenon JJ, Babeock W 13 3 Baker G W Bruoer I Blair B W Cronin J Clayton G R Gole J C Cloud J Chace J Cuter H Oramer W Y C B @arroli C Dy:on B Curtin J Driseoll BD VorrJ P Davies H Haokert B Feder H Franty C Flowers L M Garlich H Froeeman M Florehein & M Geassan A Gaus 1, ford, who is now the duke of Marl- |mon: was sent around to discover the borough. Peoplo in aoclety aro now dis. [¢aue. After a whilo s foand out 1hat cusaing the probabilities of the Duke of | the connection with the ground wiro had Marlborough's fuifilling the solemn | bocome:disturbed. ' The wiro was loosoa. plodgs which ho made to Lady Aylestord | ¢4 and only formed just suflicient cirouit somoyears ago, to make her his legal [t convey sound. The shaking of my en- Wife 38 scon us possible. She exoused |ines axd machinery oauteda. vibiation, her conduet in- eseopting Lord Bland: | Which wade the buzzingsound. Thou wa ford’s protestion on tho pion that life was | Feconnected the grousd wire; (ho.elratt intolerable with Loz Aylesford, and that | Wascompletedsndatrengthenod,and Ihave Lotd Bluadford had promised to marry [ROWLo:more troublo with tne phone. hee as_soon as she could' get a divorce. Almost all the troubles with engines,ma: Now that Lord Aglesford has been re. [Chines, oud complicatid instruments uf moved by death, it remains to be soen | 41l kinds afo causcd by just some simple whether-tie Duke of Maslborough will ;‘;z‘:: Sacise ;h;:m;\n ;hl:;‘;“gr‘:{oczzi falili ki pronias e mads olgis yeb ey i pund ot o sty p ‘Watches are so small, and their pacplomioatewellibon naRad it | oo TR T eyt careful inspection to find she cause of any troublo,” said a joweler. The causes.of ra|sudden stoppage are very varisus, but amongthe mo:t frequens is the want of oil. A.drop of oil in 5. watch i1 Jast feom oighteen months t» two yairsas a lubricator.. At the end of -that tme the worls beceme dry and_onsiderablo weas ensuca. Still a watch, may run for fiy years before it stope. Jf a watch i brought tome I can b always say in- DAEQUA LN stantly, whas is the matber, though 1 often De. R M. Arexanpen: Fannettaburgh, | heve to make some stabement to: satisfy o a., says _ *A think Horsford's Adio | lady. or.insonsiderato »aan. Sometimes 1 The Prince of Waler, who — ——— Horsfox1's s cld;Phespbate, Phosphats isnot equsled in any orher [havo aawateh to ‘cure,’ and hav's taken it|Th S reparation of phosphoras, to pieces, but do all I would, I could rot get itxight. Then I lay it oa one side, and go to.work on something else. When come. hnek to the watch it is just.ag not that owerythicg: will lide intoplaee as easily 2apossible. Of course, the reason of my trouble ras leen a little nervousness. I lave beer. tired or wixious, or my eyes.or fingers have baen, “‘Sometimes 1 haye repairad a watch and hung it on thosack for a fow day before ) eturning it o the owser in good working onder. Thon pe:higs. in two or fthreo days he biirgs it back 83, pped rygin, 1 hat. i sometimes,a poser, berin snch a case I put the wrgel in my, pockes and caery it yound with we for a. fow ‘Hauging a watc on the rack, whisl erfoctly still and of even tampe ature not o fair test, By car ying it i myg pock. {| ot I often disccwse the tromble, whigh, is [ gonorally o very siwple one.” 7 ¢Sewin' mechines are j 8 peiky a erauky as wowngn,”said o'd Tom Maula ome of the oldest shoema'wrs of Philad “I'vo. worked e all. Theres s machime you'va heard 5o mush LL PRAISE 10 THI REPORTER. a Newspaper Man's Ald. Soveral years sgo, when I was e can- Ho was clavr than U v as, not tha best- de of thras years Ono of thens aowspnper chars womehow ot sther gpt hold of what I badi sedd—or, rather, whatd [ hodu's s»id—aud the firsy think that [ know 1 was published ss offur- tog to bot {liab. R would be maceied within [iv,\ic y1jout, tho ane that has a rayalty on. throe yews, A scribe In Baltlmoro, tof) it \vise teres litigatim on that gl got shead of his fellows, ventured to give goin’ on juctmaw. Abcat fiftgsyears ago rhe name of the lacy in that eity to v)hm’n [T was worsin'at Jas, A, Stevens & Bio), T was engaged. From my grovn ndeal~f iy, oy Rilliot strecls, Ole Januy Sov ad days to that timo 1 had not thoughe {18000 ISR LS Lt T of geuting married, much 'bus of raakIDZELLihur ajve up buswess and went to 8 wifo of the lady mentioned. I bagpou-|gogion, “Jused to wors st one o' Mac- ed to most her, koweven, u day: 0Z bW}y o ati wan coneldered wprotly good \fterward—for 1 knew her—and ashed | ;'Y 1 : her what she thought of the rumor, ke | e o T AR SRt e one told mo laughingly thet if it would nid in | g0 ® J0U0 ' pvcam for 1o deya. 1t my eleotion she would not contradied it | ,yiis. o griti 1 couddn't do nothin’ wish until afer 1 became gewernor, it then it brokeall wy. threadr, and at 1 bollove that It waz never contediot- |}/, 5 took and 3oro abouz o iwen and & ed, and s 1 eubsequently wmarried the |} 5a%i4s one of my uppers. Indy, 16 is now too Iate o Qeny it at| 4Well, T condin't find ont what was nswspaper reporter’s foctile imagination T gnesrod the hing was be- i tho matter. secured for me tho bast wife In the wodld. | 80y X nyhow, T went out and bought The distreseing diseage, Salt Rheuw, is ro:dily cured by Hocd's Sarsaparilla, the areat bliod puntier, Sold by all drug-| Rlie e £ SRR Qay an' spent it on the 2iver in & Dola The Iinois Row. Wi stears Well, Tdon't know what SpuivGrieLh, Jauury 17—The house of | did it, whether it was tho re-t had put it reprosentatives was o continuous sewsgn |in & good humerar the cleaniug, cathe oil, from 9 o'clock Fricay morning until twetbis |1t Whan I when duwn to the shop next worniog. Tbe time_ +as spent_in dilatory | 44Y the old thing went along like a hon a8 aud. florts by tha republicans ta. . | afire, as though never hadn't been nothin peakor Hyines Al,unda tine x}!lm wrocesd- | the matter with it. 3 ings were tumuituous and a collilon wes| epeon 1) Tmm——, thiostenad; The bowe finully adjouroed | ‘4Broz had avy bother wilh my ey The unde standing now is that Hlaes will re-{ 01 E Muriay,an of ginewr on the Penn. sign oa Mouday or Tacrday. Thron of the |3yivania railcosd. No, L cad’t say I ever demoeratic members aro sick avd Shaw, of §d'd, bt I've bea'd old Ja'e Finlsy, who Cars county, quite seriously with tareatensdf yaed to ran the exnress between Phi' Passients. adciphis a3d Now Yok, tell aquoaratory —r—— 15 of u trouble be got into once. He was The laundsy at 1512 Howard street hus | considered & govd eoglneer, and we s un- 3‘|ugu‘: 1]:3-1:.::71‘:!1)', and is preyared to | goubtedly a thoroughly capable maa, 1t 0 first-c ork, avery part of it, thea T oiled it afe bt hiim be for o whele day. I ‘memdor ie an’ my ¢1d woman teok a holday that T ihought I snowed that machine som epirita o’ turpentine and cleaned up | g Y HC was one wintey 8 good mmaty years £, he ! shou'd have if, Horn J 8 Honister D H Haalkson F Hunson L 1 Holl D Johnson G W Tsoohson H Tacobson H Tarson F Lingall J Leden C A Leon J T Mondes R M Mallory J C 3 Mitchell L Hall H Howard St 807 Hixod A M 2 Hanky ¥ Jensen A Jensen J J Landeryon Mr Lombardi 1) Toarsen C M B Maty H O Mitchell J Medor H Moody F C MoDonald F elwen R Nolsn M NolleJ A G Nordling D Neidig J Oppeubeimer J O'Gonnell D 2 | ibrien B A Prodhtall 5 H Pepper W, Petterson G Yorian J E owers J Prouty H A Plento.] Phillippi ¥ Reed. Ritchie M Loffalle R Roacho J Rosenicrany F Rardber oberta n 1 Roberts W A ohin 3 Robertson C Rosenthal H Rowley W sullivnu Bl Seaberg O A Schwartz D Simmons ¥ Fullivan N.J Soyder L A Scher s Brog Scheede H seity D S Schenk D Sheiblay W P Splitt G Slank (¢ Teudell T, Tullz 1 vall Wil Vandoren C H 5 Wizag SE Wilkes J TaTis LIS Anderson Miss A Anderson Mise 12 G Azebibaid Miss K Attendoff Miss 1 Demy Mrs B Burvall Miss I y Hestrom L G Barker Mrs A Dawmgartner M Bowman Mes Cols Miss K Carlson Miss T. Ca roll Mra C ¢ Eoffan Mrs Gs Carr Mis 7 A Coyle Miss A Cominss Miss M Douglas Mres M2 Dilenbi ck Miss J Edwards Miss o waras Mrs E . Eayres Mes L B gson Migs M Fuadia Miss 5 Benvett Mrs M Cross Mrs G Flagg Mrs A Geoige Mrs (5 roham Mies ¢ Gray Mrs A lingher Mrs Onoden Mes . Gro u Mra Hormon Mr, £ Howell Mis 12 D Houso MisiJ Hanson Misg A Hookipson. Miss Lilges Mrs J Jenison Nirs N Keys M Leon M Towell N D Larson Mre T Mullon Mes H 3 Maeteraon C 15 Moris Mrs L Muwford Mgs & ¢ Malovey Mlss N Mrs Mitchell Miss It Hays Mics L Huues Mrs A Knuth Mrs M Lockwood Mrs M Lasells Miss A Morrsey A W BT Mijes Minw 1 2 Miss ¥ Nebel Misw M Mies A 4 Mrs H Petterson Miss K Peis Misw A Parker Mxs 3 P Pacpons Aise M Right T Padewsn Mra M Palm.r Mra M 5 Russell Mrs 1, Reilf Mrs C a Salisbury A J Tallor Mics J Work Miss L, Windsor Mre 5 Tirowes Mrs C W W ilace Mrs N Willrodt Mrs % Young Miss 3 Zoo M FOURTH CLANS MATTER, Richardson £ W rman 1 Walton J Wells H S Misner W T Mossehead W H Ruh 5 Clwk Nrs G W Gireen Miss M Henges MraG B Straight Mrs K. Covran. Postmaster, —en Ex Vice Ohsncellor of Louisville, Ky , Hon. James Harlav, says of S', Jacobs Oil: 1 we it aud 1 koow full weil wherecf I speak in proncupciog it & wost extraordinary cure for all that 1s claimed for it by its proprietors, Every family N No ono need suffer five {rkoumatism twe autes after applying this wondesful sooth- jou'd hardly got al FO]"E i RA_I.T.”Q'.. Q Rheumatism, Neural L ] R R St e MECHARLEE A VR 08, W ) HEA LTH. H 1L J b0 SRAs et 3y 0 Wi o s Sei et cured m ot rhonmaten, e s ermy e SOt g e, e, O IR ) tive Just fow yoora lo m maattor of nlamont to those who pay an rly fhrty ured o, Ihavs heen afilicted with thexnatism vears, and a faw bottles of Swift's Specific I God seod b thopuleto. | rneon, Ga. | Oconstonsi visit to thisgrowlng olty. Tha dovelopment of the oot Yards—tho 1 have beoa entiroly rolloved of sevore ricumatiom | nacosalty of the Bolt Yne Road—the I my 1ight arm 1y the use of sed through last winter withor ; e finoly paved stesoti—tive hundreds of new Hroxey HI 1y £d. Se. Cultivaior, Atlanta, Ga. resldonsen and costly busimesa blocks, with the population of onr clty more than doubled {n the lasi five yesre. All this {8 a grens curprise to visltors and In the admiratien of our oltlzors, Thin rapld growth, the busluoss activity, and the e O Fhematier { many aubotantial icprovementa inad A. Kiik, Croos Plaing,ala, { lively demend for Omaha roul ostate, & overy (nvestor hes mado & haude profit. Stnse the Wall Street pania with tho sabsoquont ey there has been loss dou: tors, but » fafr dor sookling iy RS —1 had Wa8 ro en on ound an weli, w8 E7RA Mrksiow, Macon, Ga, boen a snfforer frot »d ton ekefoton hoe. Swifte Ipec fic has cured m Swift's Specific kas Switt's Specific s ontiroly veget Treatise on | BYod and Skin Disease much loss o ar honoe lators, too, can bay 2l onta’ 3 cheuper now and onght o take wdvant e of pre 3 for futore pro ts, The next few y d el opments in the past fiv: years, which have boen as good as we could ressonsbly desite. New wman- facturing establishments sad large job- \ouses ara added almost weekly, and ail add to the proeperity of Omaha, Thero are many in Oinaha and through- bat the State, who have their monoy in the bauks drawing o nomtual rate of tersat, which, (f judiclonaly investad in Omaha real eutate, would bring them much greater roturus, Wo have man: bargalns which we are coulident will bring the purcheser large profita tu the near futore. o8 grestos ‘We have for sale the finest repi~ AORLACIOS FOOD €0, Rncine, dence property in the north and G Ukr HORLIOK'S DRY EXTIACT OF huLT'u‘l’v - o western parts of the city. DOGCTOR i o & Y .»1 wfiuu‘fia E E R able prices o4 Sherman avenue,} T_Ch, B8 18th, 19th and 20th streets. o ?.nnh. o, ¥ West Cuming, and all the lesding streeta in that direction. North we have fine lots at reason- on Farnam, Davenport, 3 o, Debiity, Me 2ns Physical Woaki . Meraarial and otier A Hans of Throat, Skin or Bones, Blood Poisoriag, 214 Sores and ch%f;, are treated with unparaisud S wlateat ssientit s prineis: Ay, . ey, Prica m $naiscretion, E. The grading of Farnam, Califor- s Arisinyg Tro XCO3% Induigen, e nia and Davenport streets has made accessible some of the finest and nddrss, ot Frith for quasilo A Positive Wrivren Guarantos i cheapest residence property in the ctves tn all cor, B Pamphiets, B poribing above city, and with the building of the street, car line out Farnam, the pro fo sz, e i perty in the western part of the eity will increase 1n valua We also bave the agency for the Syndicate and Stock Yards proper- ty in the south part of the city. The e " R B Pia W ) s developwents made in this sectiow l by the BStock Yards Compuany and b the railroads will certainly double the price o shors time, Wae also have some tine business lots and some elegant inside resi- dences for Parties wishing toinvest will find soms good bergans by calling NEBKASKA LANY KGENCY 0. F. DAVIS & 6 SUCOESBOR 10 JAVIY @ GNTONS r‘il I, iu‘:!ml.. i} b o e Inct Ur BTNy E ESTAT 1605 FARNAM KT, . OMaDa, , 200,040 wives ¢ EEAL BETATE BROKERS, 213 fouth 14th B8t Bet veen Farnham and Douglas, P, 8~We sk those who bav: property for sale at a burgain to givs as a call- We want only bargains We will positively not handle prop srty at more than ite real value, Watning 3 ), S50, 1 Lutier Jovnting 15 #il ports of {hs Bias «d on mpioyed farms (4 Prhiie alwave v affos DEVELOPMENT Corresnond limilar process.) A copy of this ops for 30 cta. Addrs LOCORIG IBA L GOULD&E0'S: 18 CONDUCTED Reyal Havana Lottervl (A GOVERNMENT INSTITUTION.) Drawn at Havana, Cuba, Every 12 to 14 Days . HALVES, $1.00 lled by the ng in the ICKETS $2.00, . Bubject astipulation, not artics in in‘erest. 1t jy toe ' fare uature of chavce i existence, For i cruation and partioclars apply to SHISEY & 0., Gw eral Agents, 912 Brosdsay, N. ¥ elty. MOLL & CO., 417 Walaut s treet, St. Louls, , Mo, Freuk labraio, L. D,, 20 Wyandotte, Kao, VUG & W