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W e L £ L i S OH! MY BACK [em-oe_sewow zeko. Every strain or cold attacks that wesk back and nearly prostrates yon, Strengthens the Muscles, Steadies the Nerves, Enriches the Blood J. L, Myena, Prirflold, Towa, says. DB v Trom Bhers . Lo bt Tron ¥ 1y s Dracice it wpecially benafloial tiom, and in a1l debilitating ailmonts that bear s Uso it fs 7 my own family.” heavily on ¢ taining | ooins, it mailod U AN RO VEST OPERATING RUICKEST SELLING AND 0T TUNPRCT COURIRG 70 \ g ine v attered vo tne oubiin s : 18 CONDUCTED BY Royal Havana Lottery (A GOVERNMENT INSTITUTION.) Drawn at Havana Cuba, Every 10 to 14 Days. Tickets in Fifths, Wholes $5. Frac— tions pro rata 103 coatrolled by the tho falrest thing ln 6h existenos. SHIPSEY & CO., 1212 Broad IGER & CO., 103South éth 84 84, Louls, Mo , or MOTTENS & 00, 619 Maln 8b. Kanesa City, ko. DREXEL & MAUL 1 (RUCOESSORS TO JCEN @. JACOES) UNDERTAKERS | the old tand 1417-F arnam 88, Grdors by tcle golicited and prompAl sttended 0. Telepbone JAB, H. PEABODY, M. D, Phys:cian & Surgeon Restidonoe No. 1407 Jones B4, Office, Ko. 1609 Far. nam etrest, Office hours,12 m. to 1p. m.and frow 08p. m. Telanhor ‘or office 07.racidennca 195, : QMAHA. i SAVINGS BARK | Cor, 13th and Douglas Sts. Capital Stock, 2150,00¢ Liability of Stockholders, 300,000 LOANS MADE ON REAL BESTAT.. OQINcors o IDIroctoxr s .President Vide Peneur lug Director Cashicr KIMBAL:, MAX MEVER, ¥ L. BTONE. AZFNE LINE OF Pianos & 1o —AlL WOODBRIDGE BROS, THE ONLY EXOLUBIVE MUSIE HOUSE IN OMAHA NEB. COWING & GO. Jouumns 1 WROUGHT IRON PIPE, Malleable and Gast Iron Mo, CHAS. ¥, MANDER J. W GANNETT, HENRY PUNDT Plumbers' Gas and akam Fitters (RON & BRASS GGODS, ENGINEERS' 8UFPLIES, #4Lh & Dodge Sts.-OMAHA. NEB. ONSUMPTION, 1¥o romiedy for o abore diss lea o | to Liat, Schwatka Rells Sométhing Abant Colt Wetter, Life In the Arctic Keglons—A Sledge Journey With Sixty-Kight Degrees Below Zoro. the Mercury New York Times, There are a fow places In the United States proper (the word *‘proper” beln| put In to exclade our colony of Alaska, almost a third of which 1lles in the arctle reglons,) where the winter weather Is in- tensely cold, and where even the summer weather Is £0 cool that both seem like the polar reglons, but these fow places are so far in the west, among the high moun. tains, and #0 thinly populated, that I feel quite suro that the mere mentlou of 71° below zero—or 103 below the freezing polnt—will make the chills run over my readers, and If it bo a warm day when they peruse it they will be accordingly thankful, and, I hope, will not ‘cast it aside with a mere glance at the heading, even If it be not. The author was {na heavy storm, last- Ing some two ot three hours, on July 8, 1876, whilo elk hunting in the high spurs of the Big Horn mountains of Montana, and when returning to camp learned that another hunting party had croseed their horses cn the fce of a lske on the 4th of July at a still higher level, the lce not having melted from the winter's deep freezing., The 14th of August the same yesr lce formed on the water in our cump kettles and buckets, and, in short, in that portion of the country it Is cold enough to give a person who may live there long a chance to see a snow storm every month in the year—as the author has—but it {s not of those districts we will write In describlog 71 ° below zsro. It was in the Arctic reglons, not far from Black’s Great Fish river, when the author was conducting a homeward sledge journey to Hudson’s Bay, in the depthof an Arctlc ‘winter—November, December, January, February and March. Severe weather—that is, inten- sely cold—had set In just before Chrlat— mi 1 1879, the thermometer sinking to 65° and 68° below zero, and never gotting above 60° below, we were having a very hard tlme with our sledging along the river, our camps at night almost in sight of those we bad left in the morning 80 closa were they together and 80 slow- ly did we labor along. Reindeer on which we were relying for our daily sup- ply of food, were not found near the river, and being seen some ten or fifteen miles back from it, T determined to leave its bed and strike straight for home in Hudson’s Bay. We had been gone three or four days, and &8s we ascended the higher levels the thermometer commenced lowering, and on the 34 of Jaruary, 1880, at 4 o’clock in the afternoon, resched 71" below zero, the coldest we experienced on our sledge journey of neatly a yesr In length and vhe coldest ever encountered by white men traveling out of doors, for that day we moved camp some ten or twelve miles to thesoutheastward. The day was not at il disagreeable, 1 must say, until long toward the early night,when a slight zaphyr, the merest kind of motion of the wind that would bardly roffle the ves on a tree, or even sufficient cool the face on & warm day, sprang up from the southward, and, slight and insignificant as It was, it cut to the bone every part of thebody that waa exposed, and which fortunately was only the face from the eyebrows to the chin and about h:lf of the cheeks. We turned our backs toward it as much as poseible, especlally after we had gotten into camp and got to work bullding our snow houses and digging through the thick fce of the lake for fresh water, and solazlly did our breath that congealed into miniature clouds float away to the northward, like the little light cirrus clouds of & summor eky, that we knew well enough how terribly cold it must be without looking at tho thermometer that stood at 71” below zero, Fahrenhelt. It is not so much _the Intenslty of the cold, expressed in degrees on the ther- mometer, that determines the dissgree- ableness of arctic winter weather as it Is the force and relatlve direction of the wind, I have found it far pleasanter with the thermometer at 50°, 60", or even 70° below zero, Fahrenhelt, with little or no wind blowing at the time, than to face a rather stifl breezs when the little tell-tale showed 50° warmer temperature. Even an arctic acclimated white man faclug a good strong wind at 20° or 25 below zero is almost eure to freeze the nose and cheeks, and the thermometer does not have to sink over *4° or b° to induce the Etquimaus themeelves to keep within thelr snug snow houses under the rame circumstances, unlets want or fam- ine demands their presence in the storm. With plenty ia the larder for all the wou'ks, brate and hu: , none of them venture out in such weather. It s very consoling to add, howaever, that the intensely cold temperatures of the arctic are nearly always accompanled by calms, or at lenst by very light winds, and such was the case on our memorable 3d of January, 1880. In fact, with the exceptlon of & very few quiet days during the warmest weather of the polar sum- r, these clear, qulet, cold ones of the tic winter are about the only times when the wind is not blowlng vigorously from some polnt of the compass, or so it seomed at least in that part of it where my teavels wore cast. 1 doubt, however, 1f there are as many fearful storms dar- ing low temperatures in the arctlc as in the far northwestern part of our own oountr, where they are known as *‘bliz- zards.” Certainly, in proportion to the ability of withstandiog extreme cold, and the methods the polar inhabitants have of combating it, there are no such dan. gers run by them of life or dlscomfort by our brethern of the far Northwest when the ‘‘northers” comedown on them In the dead of winter. There were & fow exoeptions to thls general rule of qulet weather with ex- treme cold, and when they had to be en- dured they were slmply terrible, One morning the thermometer at 8 o’clock showed us that It was 68" below zero, but s {t was calm and qulet we p id little attentlon to it, and harnessed our dogs and loaded our sledges for our day's jour- noy, which was an exceedingly short one of three or four mlles to the snow house of an Exqulmau where we oould buy rein- deer meat for ourselves and dogs. We were just ready to siarf P wind sprang up from the northwest that me! arol THE DAILY BEE--THURSDAY, JUNE 4, 1885. my readers that when we reached the snow house of the Kinnepatoo Erqulmau it was as welcome & refuge as if 1t had been a first.olass hotel. 1 was frozen along my left arm from my shoulder to my wrist, and it was quite painfal for number of days; and many of the others, Eequimaus as well as white men, were alsc “nipped” here and there more or loss soversly. The wind was strong enough to drift the loose snow along the gronnd, but I sappose our fmaginations during such a straln made us think It was very much stronger than It really was If we could have measured its rato witha proper instrument. When wo got to the end of our journey I agatn looked at the thermometer, and It indi- cated 66° below zsro, that is, it had got warmer by 13° ina half hour to three- quarters of an hour, the time it had taken us to get through, although it might have been thirteen times thirteen degrees colder, judging by the way we felt. 1 told the E:quimaus, who had been with us on tho short trip as _tledge drivers and so on, that 1t was mach colder —as shown by the Instrument—in the qulet air jast before we started than it was when the wind was raging the high- eat, but I think from the inoredulous glances that they took at each other that they voted the thermometer as the most accomplished Ananlas they ever met, and wondered how we could be duped into such preposterous ideas directly against our common sense and personal observa- tlons of cold, They might believe the world was round and turned over every day without the polar bears eliding off the elippery iceberg when it was upside down eimply bscauss the white man, thelr acknowledged superlor in iatelli- gence, had sald so, but nothing would persuade them that whon they felt por- fectly comfortable and warm loading the sledge and harnessing the dogs it was colder than when their. arms and legs were frosen, and thelr noses and cheeks “nipped’’ most feroclously with the froat. We tried to explain the effect of the wind, but they sald they had known the wind to blow them off their feetin the By holding the esr nesr to the snow this mauso of the cold can bs heard a_couple of miles away, and at this great distance sounds like the'soft murmurings of an ADlan harp or distant minglings of gultars, Sometimes when breathing this ex tremoly cold alr my tcngue folt as If 1t was freezlng in my mouth, but I could readily rid myself of this uncomfortable foeling by breathing through the nostrils for a minute or two, Natarslly you will ask ““Why not breathe through the nos- trils all the time (" as you have so_often heard advocated, This bltter cold air passing through the nostrlls keeps up an irritation so that the consequent catarrh makes it desirable to use the mounth nearly altogether In bresthing. Also,the nose is more liable to freezs when breath- ing through It. These freezings of the nose and chooks are very common sifalrs, occurring over a doren times a day in very low temperature, and especlally if thera be any wind blowing in the face, The HKequimaus ocure theso slight frost bites by applylog the hand, warm from the rolndeer mitten, directly to the spot. They knew nothing of rub- bing frost bites with snow, so extolled in our own cold climates, and I doubt its efficacy myself In those extremely low arctic temperatures, when the snow fs like sand if looss and like granite rock if in maes. Another fallaclous idea ex- ploded by my Eequimau, at least to a great extent, way the use of snow to quench thirst, which every arcile writor has been #0 unanimous In condemning as hurtful, My E:quimaus used It at all temperatures to alleviate thelr thirat, first breathing on the viece of snow a few times before putting it in the mouth- I have often seen Esquimau boys place a steel snow kaife to their tongue and let 1t froezo fast, and them swing it back- ward and forward until it fell, and try and make it stick upright in the enow. FREDERICK SCHWATKA, e —e—— PERILS OF SOCIETY GIRLS, A Lack of Men the Trouble at the summer and not frecze them a particlo, and very much preferred to believe that the little thermometer told a fib, or at least was badly mistaken., They said they knew 1t seemed colder when the wind blew, but that was because it act- ually was colder at those times than I others, and not slmply because it seemed 80, and here they stood firm, The thermometer stood at —71° Far. euhelt, the unclouded sky in the viclnity of the sun, hanging low in the southern horizon, ssyumed a dull leaden hue, tinged near the sun’s ylm with a faint, brownish red, not unlike the skles we seo coarsely palnted on cheap chromo- lithographs displayed for sale fa third- rate picture shops. At nighttime the stars glitter like dlamonds under the electric light, and fairly seems on fire with thelr brilllant radlance. Should you pour water—oold water taken from the well dug through the ice of the lake near which you are camped—upon the surface of the ice, It grests you with an astonlshing crackling nofss like fire run- ning through cedar brush, or like a dozen bunches of minlature fire-crackers, and the ice that was so clear before that you almost telt timid about putting your foot on it for fear that it really was not there, now instantly turns as white as marble and as hard to see through as so much snow, caused by the infinite num- ber of little seams ranning in_every dl- rectlon through It from the unequal expanslon. Many of the Esquimau chil- dren amuse themselves trying this simple experiment until the white spots on the clear ice of the lake give it a most mottled appearance. Vapor and stéam seem to roll away from everything of a living nature, and the sledges with its ten or fifteen dogs and its four or five humans in harness looks like a starting locomotlveenvelopsd in Its escaping steam, and leaves a trail of vapor behind them ressmbling the dust stirred up on a well-used road by wagon wheels. Should the party halt to rest in & basin-like valley this vapor rapldly collects as a fog bank, and in a little while bacomes so dense 8o as to ob- scure the originators from & person at a distance, but really mukes their where— abouts ensily detormined by this very eign. Herds of musk oxen and relndeer meko thelr positions visible by thismeans at quite long distances—If the herds be large, four or five miles away, and at from favorable heights, even three or four times this distancs, so the Erqulmau hunters clalm; so far away, in fact, that it has been known to take two days sledging to reach them; but my readers must besr in mind that a day in the arc- tle winter 18 very short, often only an hour or two loug. Eyen at theso won- derful and extreme distances the most keen-cyed hunters clalm (and theeo Etquiman are never given to premedit— ated falseocod) that 1hey can tell whether the herd is one of musk oxen or relndeer by some varying peculiarities of the va- pors which I did not clearly uanderstand. and which 1 never took an opportunity to practically apply. Even the foot of a person walking along as it is lifted from the ground leaves a little puff of vapor to float away from the spot &s If the walker hsd stepped upon s sponge ssturated with smoke, which was liberated by the pressure, and this, too, when there are four thickn of heavy reindeer skin between the foot and the snow underneath, So scarce was the game throngh this part of the country, and so absolutely de- pendent were we upon it for our daily supply of food, that to increase our chances of securlng it we separated into partles, one and two d: journey apart From each other, (although traveling the trall,) and thus each space between camps was gone over twice or three times, and our chances of seeing reindeer or musk oxen increased proportionately, Ooca- rionslly my eledge would be in the resr, and before we started in the morning it would sometimes be useful to know if. the party abead had moved on, and Too- looah, my sledge driver, would climb a pear hill, and If the weather was in- tensely cold and clear was almost sure to be able to tell me, althongh the measured are sledge journey to the anow house that he | edg had dlscerned by Its ascending vapors was often elght and ten miles, and prubably three-fourths as much in & stralght line, Whenever the sledge was traveling along Its iced runners dragging o the fine gritty snows would glve forth a clear musical ring in the bitter cold air that sounded very much like the drawing of a resined bow over a tuning fork, a well know experlment In acoustle lectures, Mauoy of my readers who live, cr have lived, in countries where the thrrmome- ter gets down to zero and 20° below in the winter, have heard this sound coming National Oapital, Gail Hamilton, “What are soclety perils for young women?” I just asked a ‘“‘soclety girl,” and she rald: “‘In Washington, lack of men.” For glrls this Is true, There are plenty of men in Washington. Perhaps in no clty In the Unlted States Is soclety worth so much &s In hington, because 80 many distinguished men gather there. In no party do you fall to see groupe, any one member of which would be consldered worth making a feast for in other clties But the distinguished men of Washington scarcely come at an earhier period than their early middle 1ife. They are In Washington because they have already won more or less eminence. They are past the uncertainty, the heritancy, the un- pursuits, Tae young men, the natural mates for the glrls, are in other cities and distriots practiclog law, learaing to edlt newspapers, cantorlng over cattle ranches, preaching sermons to young women and probably making a poor fist of it, explor- ing mines, earning money, winning fame. By and by they will come to Washington, but in that day our girls will not be glrls eny more. A very few of these young men are in Washinglon, but very few, hardly enough to go round. Conso- quently a girl who goes into sociefy en- counters the perll of not finding many stimulating minds among her younger comrades. And there are perils of five o’clock teas, rulnous to digestion and always the perll of confounding the cakes and candies of life with its roast beef. ““Soclety” Is so fascinating that girls are in danger of for- getting that it is refreshment and rest, not steady work. ——— A Well-Known Doctor's Experience “Dr. C. Fawcett, resident physiclan of tho Unlon Protestant Infirmary, Baltl- more, Md., publishes a card certifying that having recently had three cases cf consumption under {reatment where obstinate cough was the most prominent symptom, he concluded to give Red Star Cough Cure a trlal, and in every case where it was usad the effect was most marked and beneficlal, as it seemed to have the power of controlling cough and theroby promoting sleep, especially at night, when cough {s always the most troublesome. e A Tramp Btory on its Travels, Peck’s Sun, Porhaps a more surprized and warmer trawp never lived than the ono who tarned up in Omaha, Nebraska, recently. He was strolling along when his eyes caught sight of a brick kiln that stood hard by. While gazlng at the kiln the 1dea suddenly struck him that he could ascend to the top and evjoy a nice qulet little snocze without befng disturbed, Later In the day some workmen started a fire in the kiln and were going about their various duties, when they vere started by a whoop that would have done credit to a Piute. They gozad in the di- rection from whence the nofse cams just Reo Sr A TRADE/,\ED/ MARK ZaTAn \/ thsolutely Freo from Opiates, fometies and Polsons. A PROMPT, SAFE, SURE OURE Cough, Aother “and Dea > prompiy Erpredscharges Price era. 7 get it for them Paiaby sending one doitar THE CHARLES A, VOGELER CONPANY, e mare. Maryiand, €. 8, As DOCTOR WHI 17 St. Cb e o dnet b Nebility, curlal and ot eated with discretion, firma a0 o by Wi A Positive Written Gu James Medical Institute Chartered by theStateof Illi- nois for theexpress purpose Jof givingimmediate relietin Ball chronic, urinary and pri- RByate discases. Gonorrhaea, ) GlcetandSyphulisin all their ¥ complicated forms, also all diseases of the Skin and Blood promptly relieved and permanentlycured by reme- dies,testedina Forty Years Apecial Practice, Seminal ight Losses by Dreams, Pimples on the Face,Lost Manhood, positively cired, There 8 no expert propriate remedy 1sat once us onsultations, per- sonal or by letter, sacredly confidential, Med- icines sent by Mail and Express. No marks on package to indicate contents or sender. Address DR. JAMES,No. 204Washington St.,Chicago,lIl. P T T s, reality of life, and ara bent on definite |* Red Clover Blossom cuRES ——— Cancers. Irnaca, Mich., Feb, 8, 1882, Mowmon, Mich. your ¥luid Extract Red Clover Compress for Cancer on tho braast, T am satlsiod it s tho best remeay for You aro welcome to use this for the it of suifcring humaniy, : Respecttully, MRS, L, A, JOHNSON, 3,0 Loosr & Co,, G 1 am ush Scrofula. rkomo time boon afMicted s d found no my appreciation of nity, which you are " “Lam, very respecttuliy, IL ARMS, Erysipelas. %00, O, Dec, 1st, 1852 it nodicino known, ours truly, W, Frever &SSoroes. R, 1. flyman, of Grand Tapic $w6 Doctaryadvised hin (0 Vs forn Bt o of fcamm: ur Ko Py ised two pounids of your Solid Fxi A now e, i A v Spri e 2, SEIBERT, Medicine Tonto and general Blood Purk fler it has no equal. For salo by all drugisists, or J. Loose & Co, Monroe, Mich, in tlme to step one side as Mr. Tramp came salling down from his lofty perch. When the fire was starced It was not long In searching out the tramp, and when he awoke hia clothes was all ablazo The men extingulshed the flames, and when the viotim started off in the direc- tlon of Omahs, there wasn't & hair on his head, and his clothes were & ead wreck, ———e— Bwitched Off on Another Track. Chicago Herald, At a statlon down In Indiana the Lake Shore com employs a lady ticket agent. She Is a good sgent and attends closely to her business, but she is a womsn still, The other day a lady trav- eler stepped up to the ticket window and fvquired about a traln that was a little Iate. ““Will the train be long?” she asked, meaning If it would be long in arriving. “Oh, yes,” was the reply of the falr ticket-agent, ‘‘longer then last season, but vzlthont #o many ruoffles around the . e — Sick Heapacug,—Thoutands who have soffered intensely with slck head- achesay that Hood's Sarssparilla has cured them, One gentlemsn thus re- lleved, writes: *'Hood's Sarsaparilla 1s worth Its weleht in gold,” Reader, If you are a8 sufferer with rick headache, glve Hood's Barsaparilla a trlal, It will doy-u poeitive good, Made by C. L Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass Sold by all drugglats, 100 doses One Dollar. - — Remarkable Cure of a Horse 1n the fall of 1883 I had a valusble horse takea with the rlnhuye. resulting in blond po.son. After nine months of doctoriog wit the remedles to be found in horse boovs, | despaired of a cure. His right hind leg was as Jarge o8 i body, and had on it over forty ruoning rores He was & most piti- able looking object. At lmt I Qhun){hl of Bwift's 8declfic, an’ commenced to ose it 1 used fifteen bottles,’ Io August last o1l symptome of the diseaso disappeared There huve beon no signs of & returo and the horso has done & mule's work on my farm ‘ever rince, Jas L. FLeMino, Augusts, Ge. January 9, 1885 Switt's Bpecific ls entirely Bloed and Skin Disesses mal The Swift Bpeciic;Co., Dra W. 26d 8 Btallion, Jack, Bheepard In WAl stand for stock at Omaha Falr grounds the cight 138 getable, Treatise on ree. , Atlaota, Ga. or 2] 5} and Dikectol 7, Call nd ‘see him and get his pecigree in tull tors 826 1 OMSON. Town Lots in Denver Junction, Weld County, Colorado. the season. A. TH| Denyer Junction is 8 new town of about 200 inhabitants, laid out in 1884, on the great trunk railway across the continent, at the junction of the Julesburg Branch, 197 miles from Denver. The town is on kecond bottom land of the Platte River, tho finest location RealEstate BEDFORD & SOUER 213 §. [4th STREET, BET. FARNAM AND DOUGLAS. Have a large list of inside business and resi- dence property, and some of the finest suburban property in and around the city. We have business property c¢n Capitol Avenue, Dodge, Douglas, Farnam, Harney. Howard, 9th, 10th, 13th and 16th sreets. ‘We have fine residence property on Farnam, Douglas, Dodge, Davenport, Chicago, Cass, California streets, Sher- man, St Marys and Park Avenues, in fact on all the best residence streets. We have property in the following ad- ditiens. Hawthorne, McCormick’s, Millard& Caldwell’s| Kountz & Ruth’s, es, Impr’'nt Association Elizabeth Place Wilcox, E. V.Smith’s, Burr Oak, Horbach’s,! Isaac & Seldon’s; Patriok’s’ Kanseom’s Pa._rke’r’s, West Omaha, Sl_un'n S, Grand View, Gise's, j Credit Foncier, Nelson’s, Kountz’ First Armstrone’s Kountz’ Second, Godfrev’s, Kountz’ Third, Lowe's, Kountz Fourth, Kirkwood, Syndicate Hill, College Place, Plainview, Park Place, Hill Side, Walnu¢:Hill, Tukev & Kevsors, ‘West End, Thornburg, Boegs & Hill’ Clark Place, Capitol, Mvers & Richards, Reed’s First, Bovds, and all the other Additions to the City. Syndicate Hill Adjoins the stock yards property in 8outh Omaha These lots are aold at $100. They are nicely lo- cated and will make convenint, cheap, and de- sirablé homes for the employes of the stock yards and packing honses. Tukey & Keysors Sub-divisior. Located in West Omana, two blocks south of Leavenworth street, « fine location ard the cheapest lots in Omaha; $125 for inside lots and $150 tor corners; terms $10 down, balance 85 per month; dont fail to see these if you want a bargain, Kirkwood. We have a few lots left in Kirkwood addition, which we offer at low prices, terms $256 down balance $10 per month. These lots are on high level ground and are desirable. Hawthorne. This addition is mcre centrally located than any other new addition near the best Schools in the city. All the streets are being put to grade the grades have peen established by the city council, and is very desira- ble residence property, only 15 blocks from Post office, prices lower than adjoining ¢dditions for a home or investment. These lots cannot be beaten. For SaLe-Lot on Davenport with fine house, $2,000, Foxr Barg—Full lot 21st and Clark street, 6 room house, $2,800, ¥ on SaLx—Beautiful acre lot in Gise's add. 81,200, ¥on Sate—Lot 28th and Karnam street, good property, $1,600, ¥oR satR—4 acre on Oalifornis, east of Sacred Hourt; house, bara, auf cistérn, chesp only 81 ok 8aLE—Lots in Hanscom place each, 8500, For 8aLE—100 feet frout on 15th street,with small house just south of Hartman School, oa- Iy $1,700. ¥o saLg—Full lot and 5 room housecorner 11th and Castellar, $2'100, ¥on saLk—Lot and 2 housea 18th and Niche olas 85,000, Fon Sare—} lot on Chicago street between 18th and 14th, $2,500, BravTiFuL lots corner Fernam and 20th street cheap, For SaLE—Lots in Walnut hill, $200, Fon SALk—} lot with 6 room house 2lst streot easy payments, $2.000, We will furnish conveyance free to any part of the city toshow property to our friends and customers, and cheerfully give inyjorma- tion regardin Omaha Property. Those who have bargains to offer or wish property at a:bargain, are invited to see us. between Omaba and Denver, aud is surround. ed by the best-laying lands west of Kearnoy Junction, Neb. ; climate healthy avd bracing; altitude 8,6 10 feet, Denver Juunction bids to become an important point, as tte U, P. R, R. Co., sre putting up manyof their buildings here, while the B. & M. R, R, Co.. are expect- ed 800n to connect at this Tha present chance for good investments in town lots will scarcely ever bs cqualed elsewhere, For sal by the lot or block in good terms by H. M, WOOLMAN, Agent, Denver Junction Colo, felt like & score of rezor blades cuttlog |from the iron runners of the swift glidiog the face, Had it started L5 or 20 min-|sleighs, and especially upon a clear quiet utes sooner we would not have thought | night with but a single sleigh within of going, but the distance ahead was such | hearlng, Could you Iimsgine that clear . Bavaria | # 8hort one and the road so good over s | frosty ring as much louder as the whistle Bremea | gontly rolling eountry that we choee to go | of a steamboat is above the whistle of & ahead rather then unload our sledges and | man, or cer y multiplied manifold 46 M wnikes | 80 Dack Into the same old camp. We|times, you conld realizs how the lcsd +..Omaha | Ale, Forter, Domestiound kept lc.hg di\;iu n; ]:duod round trot and |sledged runners fairly slog with thelr i ran alongside the sledges the whole way | polished surface dragging over the marble ED MAURER, 1218 Farnam St,lexcept one short rest, and I can assure }like snows of the {ntense Arctio cold, s Bedford & Souer, Real Estate Agents |2138. 141h 8t,, bet. Farnam & Douglas Imported Beer IN BOTTLES, .. Bavaria | Culmbacher Tohemian | Kntser ‘When Baby was sick, we gave her Castorie, When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria, When she became Miss, sho clung to Castoria, When sbio had Childres, shie gave thom Castoria Erlanger Pilsuer