Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, February 9, 1885, Page 7

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74 THF D AIL Y Are the Cheapest, Most Durable, Smallest in Size and Weight. Umaha Bee JOHEHN NAGHL, SUCCESSOR TO Hastings & Nagel., Wholesale Produc AND COMMISSION, No. 386 Holladay St., ARANTER Give us a tnal So'icit corsignments and GU PROMPI' RETURNS. Reterences—-Bradstreet’s or Gun's Denver. Denver, Colorado. QUICK SA ; and First National Bank Agencic CESSOR TO ]‘(i%TP R & GRAY). ‘LIME AND CEMENT, COUNCIL BLUFFS ADDITIONAL LOCAL NEW: " ALL ABOUT ABSALOM., His Beauty and )Tx:w;h[uu risy Pice tured From the Pulpit. At the Cong onal church yester day Rev. Mr. Hammond preached the followin sermon: “And it came toprsy after thls that Absalom prepared lum chariots and lorses and fifty ren to run before him.” 2-d Samuel, 15-1. There sre very many gocd things to be said about Absslom. He was a prince, the ton of King David, the secnd and greatest king of lsracl, He lad also toyal blood on his motlit's side. He was thy eon of one king, and the grandson of auother; therefore of highly distingulshed birth, More thas this he was very beautiful in person. The description of his beauty is quite remarkable. *But in all lsracl there was none to be so much praised as Absalom for his beauty.” There were none of those deformities in lis person which so often oflsct the royal birth. Now judging from this passage beauty is to be pralsed. Lt 1a something we sl adwire, and though not a moral quality, it is in {tself delightfn!, We must think that God dellghts in beauty as he has made eo many beautiful things; the hills, the rivers, the valloys, the clouds, the stars, smiling infants and beautiful women. In view of all this, we cannot think God is averse to beauty, when 1t is not marred by any mental or moral derormity. Alsalom lived in good style. He had a house large enough for all the kirg's sons at cvery eheep shearing feast, he haa fine horses and they were unusual in Judea at that time. He had also chariots and droye out with what men would call in this day, eplendid equipage. He was attended by fifty men who rode before bim and put on style mcraimposing than that of his father, King David himself, when he appeared in pub'ic He lad a good personal iucome; he had racelved property from hix royal grand. good of Absalom. He did not go to Hebron for a religlous object, but for the very oppositc. His purpose was to form a conspiracy and raee up a rebellion ains: his own father. He wished to usurp the place of hia father and wear the crown. King David wore the crown bya dirsct appointment from God, Noth- ing had been said to Absalom about rolgning. King David had done much for Ierael. He had beeu succeseful and victorious in all his ware; he had greatly incressad the revenues, He was not only an accom plished warrior and ruler but a poct and a musician. He had by his own elforts brought both vecal and instrumental wuslc to a kigh state of perfection. But of course he was not perfect. He had made great mistakes, and done some very wrong deeds. But he was one of the wisest and best kings that ever eat cn the throne. The rebellion of Absalom was against his loving father. David loved his son, and even this unnatural rebellion did not quench his love, fcr over the slain body of the oy the father wept and eaid, “Would to God [ had dled for thee; O, Absalom, my son! my son!” Abaalom's reason for going to Hebron had been a lie; that vow was a fabrica- tion; the compuny he took with him for the purpose of involving them in the echeme. His character, his beauty, his princely fortunewere all made to sub- serve his rebellious purpose. No thanks to him that he did notsucceed, he died tnetead of his father, he was a liar, a thief, a base intriguer, an adult- erer and a murderer. The blood of the 20,000 men whom he had sent forth to die must be required at als hands. So, the, the most beautiful man in all Torael turns cut to be a base, vile hypo- crite, and from being the moet admired turns out to be the mest execrable and dispised. What are we to lesrn from this? Thke ways of the tempter are not always homely or ugly looking. The lowest, filthiest rog shops ave by no means the most atoractive. 1t is questionable whether it would be wise to banish them for the purpose of leaving the grandest, cleanest and most costly, for the lattor are more attractive and conecquenily weve harmful, leading as a natural result in the downward course to the lowest. father; he had lands and flocks and herds and villas, 1t is ovon probabls that ho oultivated 1he fine arts. 1n addition to all this, Ab- ealom was a very courtsous man. If a common man came to eco him he shook hands with him at once, and treated him asan cqual, He was an carly riser. Not one of the slethful young men who waste all the bright morning hours in aleep. He was out among his flocks and herde, and in the city mingling in the busine:s places and thoroughfares often befors the country people wot nto town. He took wreat interest in the public af- fairs of the timcs, and was a public spiritca citizen, chafing at the delay of the courts ln rendering justice, and wishiog he had 1t in his own hands te adjust matters to the Intercsta of the peopie. When a man had a zrlevance to redress he took great interest in his case. Some mighteay that he should have shown justice in the case of his slster Tamar, but although he had done wrong in that, as in several other Inetances where he had committed mistakes, it had been years before, and the great men and wise women of the land thought that his former short-com- ings should be overlooked, as he bad re formed his wayi Absalom also showed great Jove for his father, and took a decided tnterest in the things which pleased the king. The last conversation he held with his father was a roligious talk, He told the king that while he abode at Geshur in Syria e had voweda vow that if Jehovah would bring him agsin to Jerusalem he would serve the Lord, and it wss necossary that he should leave the beautiful eity of Jerusa lem and go to the more solitary and un- pretentious city of Hebron, to pay the vow unto the Lord Kiog David was pleassd with this change in his son, and gave him permls- slon to 2o, saylng, “‘Go in posc And Absalom went to Hebron, having gather- ed together a company to attend him there. He not onlywent to worship him. self, but was anxious that others should do the same. Here we may ceate to say anything It does not become the tempter to show the cloven foot at the outset. Had Absalom revealed his purpoze from the beginning it is not probable that he could have Induced the children of David iato a rebellion agalnst the king. Over indulgence to children is nota kindoess, 1t fostors selfishnees, and wickedness, Had David taken the time to have governed his children properly, they would not have so embittered his old age. External conduct does not determine character. We must always take Into account the underlying motives cf a man's actions, the intentions with which they sre performed, before you can pro nounce the man to bo good or bad, ~Ab- salom would have been zood had his re gard for his fellow man been sincere in stead of pretended; {f he had honestly intended to have eceved God Instead of himself. Now the test of loyalty to God is su- preme regard for Hin glory snd subser- vience to his will, He sent his well be loved son to die for us, and that .was & prectous glft. And should we robel against him we rebel agalnst a loving Father; agalnet Him that brought every blessing to us; who can measure the enormity of the crime of rebellion against Him, Something mera than a fair exterior is required to rest the loyalty of the heart toward God. You ssk what you shall do? You can easily tell, can you mot! You can eassily tell whether you are living now to please God or to please yourself. Cannot you all tell this? Now, if you koow that you have been seeking your own pleasure and not his, etop! Stop right thera trying to please yoursell alone, and spend the rest of your lite in trying to please God To the editor of the Bk, In yesterday morning's ““Nonpareil's’ critlelsm on Kate Casteleson’s Co's, performance the critle indulged in & vent of venom which is not only false, but is utterly at varlance with the general LES AND Although |, ence and an the petfor No ent graced the board ur the aud sult to ars, sinment hay heatre which has provoked and genuine pleasura than this ¢ has enthusiasti Miss Whitneys, ' i Castle d M ous many Sin, Urban’s 1 nor of th The performance was all The writer hereof s awara {hat many flattering notices are given to por formers by tlie press and is not in fa )f this species of “gosh,” but in_jastice to Miss Caatloton’s company we object to such vulgar, nsultiog and uncalled for criticisms, Yours, T - LEWIS NOT GUILTY. Result of '”“ :\luld-. Winterset balance it was heralded The Trial at The news reached here Saturday that the jury, befora whom “Holly"” Lowis has been on trisl on a charge of murder, had acquitted him. This was glad news to the many frlends here of the Lewis family., Many herohave known Holly eince his childhood and knowing him to be very peaceable and exemplary, thers sere a number of the most prominent citizens bere who went to Winterset to estify tohis good character o olr cumstances under which he killed Ar‘hur Fagan in Des Moince, wera euch as to give a clear showing oi aclf defense, and altho strong grosecution was made, 1ho jury evidently considered the testimony a3 indicatinyg that the Lilllng was justifiable The jury was out from 11 o'clock Fridsy nisht till'0 o'olock Saturday morning. When the verdict was announced the audionce that crowded the court room cheerad and cheered again, while the paronts of the young man, relleved from their anxicty as to his fate, burst into tears, A YOUNG OARVER e 5 Stabs Another Places, Boy in Two Thero was a serious quarrel among some boys Saturday night, which resulted in Dick Horton stabbing John Marahan with a pocket knife. The latter boy claims that a crowd of boys have been in to habit of yetting bim mad by calling him all sorts of names, and he would stand it no longer, which started the quarrel. Maraban received two wounds, both flesh wounds, one in each leg, above the knee. \’uuug Horton was arrcsted, bnt let ot again 1o appear for a bearing this morning. — Real Estate Transters, The followlng is a list of real estate transfers filed yesterday in the recorder’s office of Pottawattomie county, lowa, as furnished by A, J. Stephenson, abstrac- tor, real estate and loan agent, Council Bluffs, Towa, February 7, 1885. George L. Fullerton to John Blumer etal, n'nul,ll nnd w}endsec} . McGiverine, lots 1 and 2, block 4, Meredith's addition t> Avoca, $416 665, Avazish Burcs to J. S. Cary, part lot 16, block 4, Walnat, $700. W. H. Gray to L. T. Spangler, lot block 3, Willlams' addition to Hac cack, $0. The Adventures of & tpanish Count, A curious story comes from Salt Lake in regard to a Spanish count, who been cutting a swell there for some years past. He came to the Mormozs a fine, tall, straight, well-dressed man, with blonde imperial, and a who had a l»nnumnu(ulm h a Cuban legation which had visited Washington. He professed himself a convert to Mormonism and joined the church, He said be was a si man and took unto himself one of the fairest of the Morman daughters as his wif In time he grew tired of Morioni; id left the church, and is now living in Salt Lake. ne of the elements of the opposition to it A scarch through the records here shows that no such name as the horme by this count was ever connected with any Spanish or Cuban legation here at Wagh ingf On the other hand it is believed that he s an imposor, and that he is mo less a man than Major Montgomery, an officer on the jude advosaic’s corps who had a very checkerad career hera at about the close of the war. The letters which make up this Spanish count's name are those cf Montgomery {ransposed, and an officer acquainted with Montgomery who met the count in Salt Lake City not long ago says there is no doubt of his iden: This man accosted the count saying: “You are the exact pictare of an officer in the United States army by the name of Montgomery.” As he eaid this the count flushed to his temples, but turncd it off with the remark: *That is not strange. Iam of Spanish-American de scent, and 1 have Montgomery blood in my velns,” This Montgomery was a major on the judge advocate's corps between 1806 and 1860, He came of one of the first familles of New York, and his relatives stand high in Now York circles to-day., He had a beautiful wife and three clil- dren at thistime. Hec Iimself at Washington by berrowing money from his fellow oflicers, a number of whom are still in the eervice here, and most ¢f whom he still owes larger or smallersums, His grand coup was some transaction I relation toa vessel by which he recelved $12,000 and gave nothing in return, This was one of the causes of his downfall. He was treated leniently on account of bis fsmily connec tlons and was allowed to resign. This dletinguished ors | | After |TaE RIGHT SOKT OF \ TENANT A Bright I3 | Head of a Household o all kinds of tenants, ontloman, b 1 hat there ws 1 paid man if 1 noticec an ol awhile & wanted to know him ‘Whatdo you want it for “To live in,” he replied Well, I said, ‘you can havo it what you think it s worth to you ‘The first month ho brought €2, and 1d month a little who said he was this man's son, with & After that I saw the man once ina awhile but in the course of time the boy paid the rent rogularly, sometimes €2 and some. tlmes 83, One day I asked the boy what | had become of his father. < ‘Hy's dead, sir, was tho reply. g that sof’ tald L ‘How long 15 attentlon to it cama me and would rent it says 1 Pay came ¢ *More'n a yon “I took his mone he answered, ¥, but Tmade up my mind that 1 would go over and Investl gate, and the next day drove over there The old shed lcok quite decent, 1 knocked at the door ana a little girl lot me in, I aske r her mot! She said she didn't ha Where is she . “We don't know, siv. She went away after my father died and we've never seen he - since B “Just then a littlejirl about three years old came in and 1 learned that these three children had heen keeping house together for . year and & Half th oy supporting his two 1 ttle y blacking and selling newspape sand the elder girl m g the house and taking care of the baby Well, T just had my daughter call on “hem and wo keep an eye on them now. I thought I wouldn't disturb them while they are gettingalong The nest time the boy came with the rent 1 talked with h m aittle and then I said ***My boy, you're a brick. right on a3 you have began and you will never be sorry., Keop your litt'e sisters together ¥nd never leave them. Now look at this, *I showed him a ledger in which T had entered up all the money that he had paid me for rent and I told him that it was all hls with interest. ‘You keen right on,’ sas I, ‘and I'll be your banker and when this amounts to a little more I'll see that you get a house somewhere of your own.” That's the kind of a ten- ant to have. sisters b boo's You keep —— TURNING AN HONEST PENNY, The Streits to Which men are Redu Honest Work- ed in Chicago, From the Chic2go Tribu **Watch him, now; dont let him get out of sight,and we'll make a stake.” The preceding mandate was addreescd to an indigent character cn Clark strect yester- day morning by & comrade. A reporter heard it and surmised that something of a startling nature wes about to occur. The pair started on a brisk walk up the strect, but all that could have been sean was a heavily ladened coal wagon, He followed the pair, and when Van Buren street was reached the driver of the coal wagon backed the vehicle onto a curb. “Which one! quick, which one?’ was asked by one feilow to his partner. ‘No. $00.” »y of 10 Years Who is the Instantly the fellow darted into the house numbered 300, and the reporter also entered, and found that the proprie- tor and laborer were making a bargain as to the amount to be pald for carrying in she coal. “I'll give you 75 conts.” “‘Make it §1, and we II carry it in, “No; only 75 cents.’ «all'right, Italy, we'll tote 1t.” In about twenty minutes a ton of ccal was conveyed from the street to a bin in the rear of the store. The men were paid their wages, and_subsequently were engaged in coversation by a reporter. “Iva the only way that we can make any money,” s3id one of the feliows to the scribe, ““Sec how hard we had to work there for a few cents, but it'll baya meal apeace and a bed.” Do you watch the wagone?” 0, yes; allus fcllow 'em; we happened to spot that wagon, and 1f we didn'c we'd have to go without a meal. (Queer that none of the gang see'd that 'ere wagon.” “¢Are there many who are willing 10 do sach jobs?” ““You can bet all you have that there 813 10,000 men in Chicago that would carry that ton of coal for half a dollar, People were never 80 hard up; toughest winter 1 ’sperienced since I left Mem- his,’ Pt quitc evident that the poor fellow spoke the truth, There is but little em- ployment in the city for laboring men outsids of carrying coal and shovellng snow from sidewalks. The men that are hungry watch the coal wagons when they leave the yards and follow them to their dettination, boping thereby to be given tho job of carrying itin and earning an honeet penny. Some persons are o anx- ious to work that they haunt the coal flices and make bargains with the buyers of coal for carrying it from the street to the shed or bin, This saves making a useless trip after a coal wagon, for in many cascs persons who buy a ton of coal carry it in themselves, o — THE SAD STORY ate, Springfield Republican, A dispatch from Bath, Me., says that a few days ago, on one of the bitterest winter mornings, a fisherman saw a hand- soue youug man sfaoding on the rocky ehere of Squirrel lsland, gazing out to sca, shouting at the top of his voice, “Josie, Josic!"” and eviden'ly unconsclous of the spray that was dashing over him The pitiful sccret of these strange a ious, according to the dispatch, is this On being gradaated from Willlams cok lewe, he catered the ecrvice of the Young was in 1969, He left the country, sno a8 report states, deecrted hie wife snd children, and by them has not been heard of to this day. In 1877 a man supposed to htve becn Montgomery turns up at Chicago, He there marrics & widow worth $20,000, runs through 20,000 of it, when tae woman gets & divorce and Montgomery n disappears. 1 think it was in 1870 that the Spanish count first came to Salt Lake, and he is, 1 am told, there now, He bears the evidence of having traveled all over the world, talks Spanish, French and Englist tluently, and shows wide acqualntance with Washington clty and lts public men. His Mormon wife left the church at the asme time that he did aud he falled i his variovs attempis to borrow money from the Mormons, Men's Christian Association, of New York for a time, but giving that up, was soon admitted as a student in the office of a leading law firm. He had inherited s fortuns from an uncle, who dled werth $2,000,000. He became engaged to & young woman in a city not far from Bath She was beautiful, a musiclan and an art st. He and his affianced were together ot summer at Squirre] island, In Octe he died after an illness of six days £he died at noon, At 10 o'clock in the fore noon they were married at her carnest re juest She sjoke only a few words af er the weddiog ring finger aud in two hours the bridegroom was a widower, Since that day the young man has been fad ng bodily and mentally. He went to New York but had to retuin,and spent most of his ime at h s wife's grave Finally he cbartered a steamer at Bath was put on her The! in th wnd ¢ dirty | ble as were a the n tooth bon rich. from t yesr the m ners w use of sively and in I can teeth I give a railr his cai There jure hi Yis; i they many thre rectify guaran Chicag Sarah Tiedeman, a yoang German do mestic workmg for Mr. Knaac, 308 Sedg- wick streef, was audc most yester like a like & mouth licerue dental busit twenty v mouths of presidents, hollow, for him to t will fill severa the grinders of coil heavers, torn the jaws of foralgn ministers as the dentist and th used to have pulled at lea the sense of the patient for tw man with the tooth ache takes his seat in my chair; administer the the yed BP,F"-\I()\’DA\ y FE I)Rl ARY Pulled 100,000 Tecth in Wash has pulled over wtual count Ho has bee and has manipulated t} re is an old dentist yasta that he oth t ra eneral e«enato! ww him to-day lean and mi > sold the p ngressmen, | king fellow, the apothecary wh to Ramoo, ho walke as though his ,mm. s 8 pair of a8 trung on wiees hungry eye igery of and hs a8 ever looked fort a dyspeptic's s3id he In response to r tell me e ‘the molara 1 have pulle buhel beskets and the palling, dust would make the largest garden toeth, Wl RUEMPING o tosk of 1 have pulled all kinds of ho firat pearl-ltke product of t old baby to the crumtli nogensrian. 1 have yauked ¢ and Lact for Frosident ¢ false teeth which his da nisticate the Whitc ith we ¢ made by my landa. £ 30,000 teeth by tl nitrous oxide, and 1his 1 use at the present tme, It i e this time the work must be don in two minutes the gas, oad a sound of the aingoing throug numping is no pain and the im. Do I think too many teeth are pulled? | 247, teeth is takes f the proper cars of should Tast all lifetime. 1 ha familics whose teeth I take cars raround. They come to me eve months and 1 look them over and thing that is going wrong. tee perfect teath for ter its first year, —— Like a Dog, 0 News, 20th, Barking violent symp! day afternoon. dog, and made attacks on rabid cur. n to carry She wae removed to the county hos) where opiates were administered to quict her. mined how far the oisease has progresecd or whether it is not a case of u«nnh). ‘s parents reside at 132 Hudson The avenue, daughter’s strange conduct this morning and say they are at a loss to awmign a cause. Omaha Nafional Bank, J. H. MILLARD, CAPITAL® Omaia Safe Deposil Fire P The physicians have not yet dete They were notified of thei U. 8. DEPOSITOLY" President. $500,000. T AULTS. and Burglar Proof Safos. ‘or rent at from § to 850 per annum 100, mothing about hav exclu cdeadens a tunnel fills ; ho awakes, and his tooth is out 3 does not in Jife to the child who is brought to me at such inter- nly taken with tho oms of hydrophobia She began to bark those near her, biting at them and snapping The sound she emitted was exactly similar to that of a dog that had been whipped—a sort of yelp—and sho ran around in & clrele foanilng a the The patrol wagon wss called s soon as possibie and it required four po- her out of the house. WMEWALLAQE Cashler SURPLUS e T Bd || Y fv;AVLv'; ICK, Tox AND DRA} n n he e A SIMPSON | Jf st | 1409 and 1411 Dodee St. ir t Platals, Window Capn, Tron Crostings, Motalifo ksl ; ) M1 Bouth 1ikh Bhtead Oumsla g THE I.EADING C JRHIM}E FACTORY { Catalouges Fi t nished on application } Omaha Ne & DOLTE, ~MANUFACTURERS OF— / ORNAMENTAL GALVANIZED [RON CORNICES Johrson, hter House din \ A, Tio, Ivon and Bis In order to give tae public in ticipate in a real German \Imhr‘ Lotte s weoffer fivo whol Hamburg 1 | have some on hund. T Ve ch 11,158, and terminato on M §|yenrs in existence: haa one hundred “th OF numbers which is over « f th 1y [after the drawings, the Original Li give 16 dilferent nimbers, t 1| =atisied with th ) 0, 30,000, et . t s shon a8 por and tickets axon, constant! office order or « Brunswick and § on hand. And Don't Lose For this ¥ ear Onlv. The best opportunity over offered to try your luck in the 1 the advantage wranteed and aanct ickata At good for o forwardiat cnce. R LUCK! This Chance. 50 hard with » small st 6f money, 1 by the into 16 diffarent small sum of £ as loug as wo incipal drawings whioh com- is Lottory has been for over 143 and tickets and fifty thousand 500 winning ant of tickets, Bach holder of tickets receives, ut of the prize if won Wae hopo, as we reccipt of tho winning lists, will bo to pare man_govorn- wo have mado wmbers of tho amo for the of the H . SCHMIDT & Street, Detroit, ) Mimings and 20th Sts, GERMAN D. WYATT. Lumber Merchant Omaha Nfb. r Omaha, ir AUTOMATIC ENGINE! SLIDE VALVE ENGINES, PORTABLE ENGINES, WATER WHEELS, STEAM BOILERS, STEAM PUMPS, ENGINE GOVERNORS, WATER-WHEEL :GOV'NORS HEATERS AND FILTERS, ROLLER MILLS, Richards & Maehznery&&'aslmgs BRUSH WACHINES, SMUT: MACHINES, SEPARATORS, LORN SHELLERS. CORN,-CLEANERS, BOLTING CLOTH, CENTRIFUGAL: REELS), SCALPING' REELS, LEATHER & RUB'R BELTG- WELL AUGERS, Clarke Neb. ELEVATOR CUP: ELEVATOR BOLTS, “ARCHITECTURAL WORK. ‘BRIDGE IRON, WROUGHT & CAST IRON, REPAIRS OF ALL KINDS, BRASS. CASTINGS, SASH ‘WEIGHTS, BRICK YARD CASTINGS, SHAFTING ‘PULLEYS-HANGERS ' &' BOXES. MAX MEYER & BRO. Of a Young Williams College Gradu- | f Ac 2407 Cuming St. NURSERY STOCK Those desiring Fruit or Ornamental Trees, Vines, § own int Suve Money by Buying orN STOVES AND RanGes. Every Stove Warranted. JOHN HUSSIE, t by calling at the real estate off mery, 1306 Hamey St., or ven soon, Solo Agent for Omaha. 200 | Fine Diamonds, Urders for spring planting must PIANOS, —AND—— ORG—ANS actory Prices, AND—— EASY TERMS. Send for ourcatalogue and pricelistbefore pur- chasing elsewhere. MAX MEYER & BRO. - |LEADING JEWELERS And Sole Tmporters of Watches, Silver- ware, Rich Jewelry, D. OGOLIST & AURIST Corner 13th 8t, Offioe hcurs 9 t0 12 . m. o Ten NEW 0. BRYANT M D. 1224 Farnam Streei, 2t0 ¢ years exporience Can epeal oot 81.d1y BrORE! A. KALISH, 822 8, 10th streo t, between Farnem aud (Hart ey Low prioos aud good Goods o specialty. All cothe made up! n good style and on short notloo. ‘convi inced. Remember the vlaoe, 822 5. 10th 4 Call s Wholesale and Retail. r. 11th and Farnam Sts. MAX MEYER & C0 SOLE IMPORTERS HAVANA GIGARS ——AND—— Meerschaum Goods, IN OMAHA, Wh and Retail Dealers in Guns, Ammunition, orting Goods Notions and Smokers’ Articles, 3tationery, Cutlery, Druggists’ Sundries And Fancy Gocds. Full and complete line and BOTTOM PRICES Max Mever & Co. 1020 to1024 Farnam Sts., Omaha Iss PHOTOGRAYHER 7 2138 North 16th Street. Ol Bee Hive Stand. The present vroprietor wishes it underatond \ hotographs a; ade atisfactory before be d from this gallery. The ol and Mr, H, K Gray suce maagemont THE CHEAPEST PLACE IN OMAHA ‘10 BUY Merchant Tailor sNee]e{l=fet A DEWEY &STONES One of the Best and Largest 8tocks in the United States .|NO STAIRS TO CLIMB. ng to Select From: ELEGANT PASSENGER ELEVATOR.

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