Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 13, 1885, Page 2

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For 28 years I suffored with ul- ©ors on my right log s _the result of typhoid fever, Amputation waa suggested a8 the only means of pre- serving life. The docters could do nothing for me, d thought I must dic For throe years 1 never had & shoe on. Swift's Specific has made a perma- aent cure and added ten years to my lite. Ww. R. Rexo, Hail Co , Ga. 1 have takon Swift's Specific for blood poteon con- tractod at a medical collego at a dissection, whilo T was a medical student. 1 am grateful to say that it gave mio a5} cedy andthoroogh cuto after my pa- Touts had spent hundreds of dollars for treatment. vustus Wesoen, MD., Newark, N. J. My wifo from early girlhood bas boen sufering from_rhoumatism. She has tried many remedies, and [ must Irankly say has derived more benefit trom Swift's *pecific than from all tye ethers Tong and faithiul trial. Rav. Ja Switt’s Speoific 18 enterely vogetable, Bool and Skin Diseases mailed free. The SAvT Srrcic Co., Drawer 8, Atlanta, Ga,, 0 160 W. 28d t., N, Y. AFINE LINE OF PSR WOODBRIDGE BRLS, THE ONLY EXOLUBIVE MUSKG HOUSE IN OMAHA ' NEB. Town Lots in Denver Junction, Weld County, Colorado. Denver Junction is 8 new town of about 200 inhabitants, laid out in 1884, on the great trunk railway across the continent, at the unction of the Julesburg Branch, 197 miles Denver, The town is on second bottom land of the Platte River, the finest location between Omaha and Denver, and is surround. ed by the bost-laying lands west of Kear Junction, Neb.; climate healthy and bracing: altitude 8,6)0 feet. Denver Junction bids to me an important point, as the U, P, R. Jo., are putting up manyof their bulldings here, while the B. & M. R Co., are expec ed 800D to connect at this place, Ths present chance for good investments in town lots will soarcely ever bo equaled elsewhere, For sale by the lot or block fn good terms by H. M, WOOLMAN, Agent, Denver Junction Colo, OMAHA SAVINS BANK | Cor. 13th and Douglas Sts, Capital Stock, - $150,00¢ Liability of Stockholders, 800,000 Fure Por Cent [nterest Paid ou Deposl's LOANS MADE ON REAL ESTAT.. OMosrs o Directors Pircr, Oxford, Ga. Treatlse on Ly 7 JOHN B WILBU cHAR P NDERS I W GANNKTT, EZNAY PUNDY rg Director veos:.: Cahler THOS. L UKIMBA) MAX MEVER ¥ L. STCNE, THE LIBEL CASE. The Jory Retarn a Verdict for Mr. Rosewaler. The Remaining Testimony In the Suit—A Complete Vindication, Yertorday morning all the arguments In the case cf Mr. E. Iosewater sgainst the publishera of the Republican were finished, and the case was submitted to the jary., Shortly afterwards, that body came in, returnlng a verdict for Mr. Rosswater, assesslng hls damages at $100. This, of course, determines the pullt of Messra, Yost and Nye, in stamp- ing the article published as libelous In its nature, and secures to the plaintiff a complete vindication, which In all such cases I8 the main thing to be desired. Mr Rosewater says that he will donate the $100 to St Joseph's hospital, Appended s the closing testimony In the case, 1. 8. HASCALL sworn for the defendant_testifiad us follows, examined in chief by Mr, Hall, Have lived in Nebraska, continuously for over twenty years, came hera in March, 1865, that is T came to Omaha, I had been to Ne braska before; sm_ncquainted with Edward Tosewater, the plaintiff in this case; knew him soms time in 1870, have known him ever THE DAILY BEE--SATURDAY, JUNE 13, 1885, in that be did_not come voluntarily within the lines, but having vot within the lines the rovost marshal swore him in, and he went in ¢ this regiment that went out to fight the Sioux Indisns, ). Wheresbouts were those speeches de- livered in which you charged Mr. Rose. water A. At different times during the campaign, . You had considerable coutroversy with Mr. Rosewator? A, Yes sir, () It was rather bitter . Only politically; personally we always talked of matters, Q. That is one of the reasons why you think he is & confederate spy because you are bitter pocitically ! A. No, 1 would not take my chances of charging it publically if I could not prove it. Q Have you any ;mml of that fact excapt wht you have stated to this jury of his being disloyal? A. 1 have circumstances that I could enum- erate that I think establishes it to satisfy my mind sufficiently to warrant me to charge it unqualifidely, . The circumstances which you have rela- ted are the circumatances that watranted you in makiog that charg A. 'No, T do not say that, Q)" Are there any further circumstances ! A. The circumstances are that Mr Spencer promised me that he would furnish the names of individuals that would proye these facts satisfactorily; there were different parties that claimed to know these facts by reputa- tion, of having been in the vicinity and of having known that he was there as well as M. Spencer, and they claimed that there was plenty of proof at hand that would sub stantiate “the charges that he was on these lines and an active man in the confederate lines and did not clmm allegiance to the United States, and from his own statements at different times which I picked up; 1 have since. Q. Do you know the charge of rumored re ports against Mr, Rosewater which is the sub- ject of this action? A. Yes, I know what the substance of the action is, and I know of these reports, Q). Do you know what Mr, Rosewater's rop- utation was in the state of Nebraska as to his baving been logal or disloyal during the war or having been charged with being arrested as a confederate spy? Objected to; withdrawn, ‘When did you first hear if at all of the ru- mors and reports regarding this charge? A. After Senator Hitcheock was elected United States senator, I think n the winter of 1870 and 1871, Q. State to the jury the nature of these charges and rumors and from what sources tlhoy came, and how frequently you heard them, A, T heard them ropeatedly and the naturo of it was this, that at the breaking out of the war he was in what is known as the southern confederacy; that the confederate government gave all parties that desired a certain period toleavein and that he stayed after that period and that he was on committees for re- ception of distinguished rebels a8 Jeff Davie and that he was 8o acting, and did so act a8 Stevenson on the Northern Alabama railroad, that was one of the charges and another was that after the union army had passed south that Mr. Rosewater among Cothers were brought within the federal line by the force of circumstances and from the time thet he entered the employ of the government and through his certain secrets leaked out at Washingtor, Q. How general had that report leen in circulation in the state of Nebraska? A. In the state of Nebraska it was talked among political men particularly;T know that it had been charged in communications and public speeches; I have charged it myself, ). Have K”“ made these charges in the presence of Mr. Rosewater? Yes sir, (). Speaking with reference to years, for how many yeara has that report as you have named it witn the circulation that you say it had been current? A. Tnere was considerable excitement dur ing Senator Hitchcock’s term and Mr. Rose- water made a strong political fight upon him and upon all those that eustained Mr. Hitch- cock, consequently it was made very often be- cause he would claim to be a Simon pure re publican, and he would attempt to show that the supporters of Hitchcock were rebeles or something, and these facts were brought out. Q. You saythat you charged Rosewater with haviog been a man who careened to both des. Did you make that charge at public meeting? Objected to. Q. State specifically as you can what these charges were as made by you in public meet- inga at which Rosewater was present? A. At different times I have charged that he certainly could not be a very good repub- lican; that he claimed to be an original repub- Tican; that he could not be an original repub- lican when he stayed within these lines when was his duty to get on the other side, and that he only got into the union lines by force of circumstances, and I charged him many times with being & conf:derate coward, that he was there in their confidence; that he was within the confederate lines when he should have been out; that all loyal men would ba north of the line, that haviug been by force of circumstances taken within the union lines, that he took the oath and went into the ser- e of the United States and consequently things leaked out. That is the insinuatlon and charges that I have repeatedly made, CROSS-EXAMINED BY MR, SIMERAL, Q. You speak of things leaking, what do you mean by leak? A, I mean that he has stated in my pres- ence, that he ws in the confidenco of Secreta- ry Stanton and that the most important things of the Government passed through his hands. ). What was it that leaked? A, The secrets of the (iovernment that went to the confederacy in such a way that the Government did not know where it came from; they were leaking all of the time duc- ing the war, Q. On account of Mr. Rosewater's relation with Secretary Stanton! Vi claimed that he was one of thoze middle agents that were liable to let things go through thom like a sive, Q. Wae he liable to do or did he? A, That ho was probably one of them that did i, (). What do you mean by probably? A. What I picked up was circumstances, (). From whom did you obtain the circum- stanco:! A, Aftor the fight became strong parties came to me and told me—— (). Who was one’ A, One was William Spencer. () Who was he! A, He clalmed to be— Q. Who is he? A. A house mover, (2, Who else came to you! A, Different ones. (2. T want the names? A, Itishke all rumors; if talked over, and from Mr, statements as to where he was about the tume, in connection with those things that we picked up, we made circumstances that we thought were strong ones Q. Do you claim that the federal govern ment established a proclamation that all north. ern men ought to get out of their lines, and that was the reason that he was & spy A, 1 did not say s Q. Don’t you know there wese thousands of men in Tennessee that were loyal that re mained there? A, Yes, eir, . Yousaid a little while ago that Mr. Rosewater was in the covfidence of Secretary Stanton in tne war department; do you pro- tend to say that while in the war department that he acted as a confederate spy and re vealed secrets A, Tenid that the circumstances that we had gathered would warrant that inferenc do not know certainly that be ever betrayed any secret either confederate or union, but we wot eireumstancesthat warranted us in making that inference, . Lid you ever hear this story about Rose- sing a spy before 18 A The tirst I heard of it was when he got mixed up jn this fight with Mr, Hitchcocl that was some time after 1852 that it started. (). Was not this speaifically charged about 1870 about his being disloyal? A I could not confine myself to the date, bat if you ask me if 1t was not reasonable to suppose that it did ot start until that tiwe, T would say thst it pr bably might; it was somewhere from 1873 to 1876, Q Don't you know that Mr, Rosewater published in 1874, or some place along there, these facta in velation to Jeff Davis, charging bim with being a spy? A, Mr, Rosewater has made sowe ex nation in the public press at different times, but one point I did notice that it kept him in the lines of tha confederates up to the time that he should have been in the Unicn line . This {a the whole point? A. Noeir; this is one of the points; the fact discassed and always watched his statements and they would affirm the fact that he was where these reports eay he was have heard him admit that he was south after the war broke out and that he was in the vicinity there in Northern Tennessee or Northern Alabama; the date of his becoming conneccted with the United States government of course was a little un- certain, and that was what I was trying to fix; but Mr. Rosewater, in his vindication, claims that he was connected with the gov erument organization and military telegraph company, and that in that capacity was where he served the union cause; that 1t was a terrible sacrifico to the Unlted States gov- ernment, having had these confidential rela- tions with the other side and having served in such a capacily there, the mference naturally comes that he must have acted as aspy one way or the other. JOHN LAWTO sworn for the defendont_testified ss follows Examined io chief by Ilive in Omaha and have for thirtcen years am a clerk in the postoffice. Q, What if anything did you know about the veneral circulation of the report in the state of Nebraska, before Decerber, 18t the fact that Mr. Rosewater had been a traitor to his country at the opening of the rebellion and had been a spy, A, AT can say is that I have heard such reporta. . How general should you say if you know that they had been circulated and “in what manner? A, It was common talk among the peoplo that I was associated with, (. How long had these rumors been in cir culation before 18 A. I cannot sny as to that. Q. For several years! A, T should judge so, Cross-axamined by Mr. Savage. Oame here from Kentucky; was not in the army; came here as a postal clerk; Mr., Hill was chief of the postal service; he was suc ceeded by Mr., Boggs and Mr. Boegs by Mr, Vandervoort, Mgr. Vandervoort was chief | of the service when I heard this report; it would be impossible for me to name any of my aesociates who made this common talk. Q Try and name one man whom you heard say that Mr. Rosewater was a confederato spv, A. I do not think I could do 1t; have heard Vanderveort say that he was in the rebel army, but never heard him say that he was a 8py. Q) Will you swear that you heard anyone prior to this publioation of Dacember 8, 1x say that Mr. Rosewater was a confederate s) A. No, I do not think I can. Q. You have heard 1t since 1832—have you or have you not! A. As that I could not say. (). Wis it one ef the counsel in this case? A. Nos Q. One of the gentlemen connected with the case? A. I was asked if T ever heard such a thing a8 his beidg & rebel spy, or his being in the rebel service, and I told bim that o heard the charge made that he was in the rebel service, Q. Have you ever heard the charge made of his being a rebel spy? A, o cou'd not eay that I have heard it, but T have read it lots of times; could not name any paper; my associates were generally pos- tal service employees and the public generally, Have known Mr. Rosewater personally. Did not have much acquaintance with him until within about eighteen months, Q. Daring that time your relations have beea perfecsly friendly without any hostility? A, So far a8 I know, () You believed that he had been a traitor to the government ? A" T would not want to swear to anything that I do not know about, PAT O, HAWES, sworn, examined by Mr, Hall, luded in bis testimony and also the one to which Mr. Hawes alluded A. Mr, Haecall, that at various times in specches he made this of arge; 1 never heard but one speech and that was at the court house at a eworks diccussion where Hans- come and Hascall were on one side_and my welf and the citizens on the other; I think I very emphatically pronounced the language ¢ falsehood at that time but it was not a charg e contaired in this paper; he satd in the inu. endo that T was captured, that I was in the confederate service and 1 etated it was false, Q. Did you ever see any newspaper article making the same charee prior to the appear ance of this article which we have under con sideration A. I sawan articlo at one timein the Omaha News which I was told Vandervoot had written which bore some semblance to thir; it was not the eame thing; Ibelieve that I published a denial of that; I published some documents, Crose-examined by Mr. Thurston, Q. When was this water fight A. T think it wasin 1881 or that was the culmination of a ten or twelve months' con troversy, Faith, Lawd, temper de win' to dat sheep, What am out in dis driftin’ snow, ‘What am lost its way from de fele An’ ain't got nowhere fo' to go, Do odders are all gaddered in, Da shepherd am watchin’ em all, But de little one los’ in do snowdrif* Am waitin’ fo’ de thepherd’s call, De sparrer dat fall from de roost To noticed by do Master's eye Lawd, go out an’ fotch in dat sheep Tefo’ it lays down fo’ to die, De Master turns out de wedder, Ho tempers de cole Winter win', He tinkle de bell in de enowdri| He am leadin’ dar little one in. Ef a man hes faith os he orter, Ef he prays es be orter pray, He kin make a mouf at de mountain, An’ de mountain'll move away. o —— BINGULARITIES, Rutland, Vt,, has a red headed colored man. An octopus measuring nearly fifteen feet from tip tc tip is on exhibition at San Jose, Ceylon spiders weave webs £0 strong that a walking stick, when thrown into it, is en tavgled awong the meshes, T. H. Lewis, a St. Paul archaologist, has discovered a mound at Prairie du_Chien’ that perfectly outhnes a mammoth buffulo, Dr. Goucher, of Nashville, Mich., is having mounted a five-pound calf, born at Castleton, Barry county, It ia perfectly formed and be lieved to be the smallest calf ever born, The largest grapevine in the United States grows onthe prem of Mr. Madden, in Pike conaty, Geor It is_eignteen years old, is thirty-four inches in_circumference nt its base, is & quarter of a mile long, and yields five wagon louds of grapes. A youvg lady of Portland, Ore, while breaking eggs for making cake, fow da. ago, found a lizard nearly two inchos in length and alive in one of the cges. The Oregonian, which tells the story, vouches for the horesty of its informaut, who is the father of the young lady, A Lowell, Mass,, man_found two perfect white roses growing on his poar tree recently. Their steme, together with the stems of three pear tree leaves, wera joined in a woody stem lees than an i in length, which supported them. The pear blossoms have all disappeared from the tree and the fruit is set. The tropical gooseberry, which Is cultivated in Florida, grows on a handeome tree from ten to fifteen feet in height, Tha fruit is rather smaller than the Siberian crab-apple, and the shape a_flattened globe, 1t contains one hard seed, The fruit is only moderately valuable, but the tree is ornamental. A curious discovery was made recently when a lightning rod, which beon in place fif- teen years, embedded in soft clay, was re moved, Thers was found attached to it a solid lump of iron ore weighing ninety-six pounde, supposed to have been produced by the conversion of the clay by the action of electricity. Among other formsof animal life which ha ze disappeared from the earth is the seacow. This great _animal, which has been variously classed with the whales, with walruzes and seals, and with elephants, was a toothiess veg- etable feeder,Zand often weighed three or four tons, It was scen alivo and described in 1741 butin 1780 it appeared to have become en- tarely extinct, A Salt Lake jeweler has invented a novel timepiece in the shaps of a steel wire stretched across his show window on which a stuffed canary hops from left to right, indicating as it goes the hours of the day by pointing with ite beak at a dial stretched beneath the wire, and having the figures from ome to twent; four, When it reaches the latter figuro it glidés across the window to one again, Thero i8 no mechanism whatever that can be seen, it all being inside the bird. The inventor says he was three years in studying 1t out, A fow dayssince a gentleman living above Dalton went to his crib, and lying in a ccil in one corner was & rattlesnake—in bulk large as a half bushel, A few feet from it was his cat gradually approaching the monster in a creep- Know Mr. Rosewater; have known him alout seventeen years; have been in the state of Nebraska saventeen years last April. () You have heard the testimony of some of the witnesses in this case A. No, none excapt Mr, Lawton and the Iatter part of Judge Hascill's, Q. Do you know the article which is the foundation of this suit do not koow that T do; T know that 184 suit between Mr, Rosewater and the Tribune Printivg company, buv I do not know anything about it, Q. That s the article (banding witness o paper) state whether you ever heard any ru mors in the state of Nebraska to the same tenor and effect as that articl A, T beard Mr. Hascall once or twica mak- iug speech about it some years ago; I heard 1t spoken of at the time, Q. How often had you heard this? 1 did not know when_this thing came out; T wasin Washington City when this was published; 1 read it at the time, About the tine that I heard Mr, Hascall talkiog about it I do not know where it was; we talked about it that night, 3 () How long ago was it that you heard of th at A, Tt must have been six or eight years ago, ten may be, Q. Did you say that Mr, Halcall made bt epeech to a public meeting? A. Yessir, that is my recollection; the first Theard about it Mr, Hascall was making the epeechand talkiog about Q. Did you ever afterwards hear it ..om any other (uarters? A, T think that I heard Gen, Strickland and Gen, O'Brien and myeelf got together and we talked about it after the meeting was over and probably I read it in some of the TS, Cross-examined by Mr, Savage, 2, Where was this speech made? A. 1 do not remember, but probably Judge Hascall will; he made phat speech as certain a8 I am sitting in this chair, General U'Brien will probably remember it Q. Can you remewber whether it was an open air of Inside! A. Tt may have been down on Douglas street where we bad the hesdquarters at that time, T could tell better if I knew whether Mr. Ltosewater and Mr, Hascall were on good terms or vot, Haecall has epoken on ever corner and saloon in Omaha, Cannot_tell where the speech was made. Know there was more than ten people, a house full or street full, Presume that Mr, Rose water w there, Capnot fix the place of the speech. I could not give the language used; Hascall wos not on good terms with him; be (denounced him; was in Kentucky when the war broke ont: left and went north; my relations with Mr. Rosewater have varied as to being friendly; 1 would get mad at him some times and he would abuse me some times and he would publich gome things that were pot true and some that were; do not feel hostile at present; ndly to him, Paul Vandervoort was tneu called, His testimony developed no rew points of evi dence, With this the defendzus rests and the fol lowing te timony was introduced ou hehalf of the plaintiff in reputtal EDWARD ROSEWATER KECALLED, @ You heard the slatement of My, Ha:call! A. I did. Q. Did vou hear the speech to which he al ing manner, eyes 1iveted, yet lacking that springy electricity peculiar to the feline when ready to spring upon its prey, e hurriedly killed the soake, hreaking the charm which was luring the cat to certain destruction, when it skulked away, The enake was said to have been five inches in diameter, and when skin- ned the hide held a measured half bushel of sand, —Dalton (Ga ) Argus, The white ant is a small insect, with a bloated yellowish white body and a some what large thorax, oblong shaped,and colored a digagreeable oily brown, There is no limit toits depredations, and itis so much feared that no one in certain parts of India and Africa attempts to travel with such a thing as a wooden truok, On the Tanganyika plat eau, says recent trayeler, 1 havo camped on gronnd which was as hard as adamant and as innocent of white ants spparently as the pavement of St, Paul’s, and wakeued next morning to find a stout woodea box almost gnawed to pieces, Leather portmanteaus <hare the ssmo fate, and the only substance hich seems to defy the marauders ore tin iron, nnd irol No Cattle Plague inOhie, CHicsco, TIl., June 12,—A telegram to the Breeders' Gazette of this city, from Judge Jones, of Ohio, chairnian of the board of live stock commissioners of that state, says that the reported new outbreak of pleuro poeu moniaina Jersey herd at Dayton is false, The only foundation for the report was the slaughtering of a cow that had been affected with disease about oue year ago and had ap- parently recovered, There had been no new cases a that state sinco last summer, ——e—— 1 Wrec! CixCINNATY, O, June 12,—Dispat hes re celved by officers of the Cinclunati Southern railway from Somerset, Ky., deny the report sent out last night that a construction train had been wrecked by the caving in of & tun nel. The story arose from the fact that Road- master Simmonds construction train going south last night was thrown from the track near New River bridge by striking a cow. The cabooee and seven cars were ditched, five la- borers killed and Foreman 'Donnell and 10 or 11 injured, o —— Business Failures. New Youk, June 12,—Failures during the ——— Frank Sulth, a prominent ellizen of Alden, Hardin county, fell from a Jadder Saturday and broke his neck, caustg In stant desth, When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria, When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria, When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria, When sho bad Children, shie gave them Castoria " Absolutey Free from Opiates, Emetics and Poisons A PRONPT, SAFE, SURE CURE - For Coughs, & . 80 conta hott $ Prrties unable to ind ) promply Yt for then i resy charges Pric TARLES A VOGELER CONPANY. 16 Owaers and Aanfacturers, Raltimore, Naryiand, U, 8, A DOQTQ% IE WHITT Nervous ©ro “hysical Weakness tions of Throat, Ski scases Arising Exposuro or Induigence, «1 +aribing abovo @ eoanns, MARRIAGE CUIDE ! James Medical Institute f 2 1t Losses by Dreams, Pimple anhood, positively cired. rimenting, The appropriate remedy 1 at once used in each case, Consultations, 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, Il IL.OOSE’S EXTRACT Red Clover Blossom Cancers. - Jrmaoa, Mich., Feb. 8, 1882, 3. M. Loowe & Co,, MowmoR, Mio GExTs—I am using your Fluld Extract Red Clover Blossom and Wot Corpress for Canoer on the broast, and um well, 1 am satistod it 1s tho best remedy for Caneer kniown. 'You ro weloome to use this for the berelc of ifcring hmani Respectially, MRS, L. A. JOHNSON. Scrofula. ToLeno, 0., January 17, 1882, 3. M, Loosk & Co., Moxmon, 3 i R {mo been afflicted and Tound no o gt o your Extract of fted Clovera triny, am Bappy € a4y 3he hus oxperienced &t Feer, This 18 DUL e Bilght tostimonial of my Apprceition of your efforts In' beh iy, Which you aro Yelcomo ta H. ARMS, ToLEDo, 0., Dec. 1st, 1852 Moxnom, M . Mich, miipnced thling o O, e e’ i Think .1t I3 hereditary with me, Thin} best blood medicine known. satibd Yours truly, W. M. SEIBERT, Frever Soros. 1. B. flyman, of Grand Rapids, Mich.. says fter S bouida of your Solid f:xtract ed Cloves Medieine Tono and gencral Blood Purk M Asn £erithas no equal. For sado by all Arugiists, or J. Loose & Co,, Monroe, Mich, H. 8. ATWO00D, Plattsmouth, Neh, Breoder of thoroughbred and high grade | dereford and Jersey Cattle, And Duroc and Jersey Red Swine, H.W.WETHERELL, — ""d‘;l:’i’ éx?},v\é;uc, Hair Cloth and Wire Bustles, Hoop Skirts, Hair Cloth Skirts,” AND A FULL LINE OF | ACK anp ————s—p Rh COLORED T ur Ext. Red Clover, 1" have not boen ‘COLORED 1. ~ WHITE $100 T, & 13y Wber iy otior atyle, "Eah Sicire 4 elaniged *u 1. Pateated dun T M0 Tar iy obe sollt ML ot v JOLBKLS 1N WROUGHT IRON PIPE, Matieable aud Cast dron FIOTINGS, Lead Pipe and Sheet WORTHINGTON BTEAN FUMF WISDALL Plumers' Gas and IRON & BRASS GOODS, ENGINEERS' SUFPLIES, B S 44th & Dadaa Sts. OMAHA.NER "9 Imported Beer Lead, ..Bavaria Eremen ST ‘Auhauser .. ....St. Louls Schlitz 1 lsner. Milaukee Al, Porter, Domestic and Kbine Wines. ED MAURER, 12)8 Farnam St 8t. Louis Milwauke Oumahs Pudwelser B BEDFORD BET. FARNAM RealEstate | o] & SOUER - 213 S. 4th STREET, 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 ¢n Capitol Avenue, Dodge, Douglas, Farnam, Harney, 16th sreets. Howard, 9th, 10th, 13th and We have fine residence property on Farnam, Douglas, Dcdge, Davenport, Chicago, Cass, California streets, Sher- man, St ,Marys and Park Avenues, in fact on all the best residence stieets, We have ditiens. Hawthorne- Millard& Caldwell’s Lakes, Elizabeth Place E. V.Smith's, Horbach's, Patrick’s. Parker’s, Shinn’s, Gise's, Nelson’s, Armstrons’s’ Godfrev’s, Lowe’s, Kirkwood, College Place, Park Place, Walnu&:Hill, West End, Bosgs & Hill? Capitol, Reed’s First., property in the following ad- McCormick’s, Kountz & Ruth’s, Impr'ut Association Wilcox, Burr Oak, Isaac & Seldon’s. Hanscom's West Omaha, Grand View, Credit Foncier, Kountz’ First Kountz’ Second, Kountz' Third, Kountz’ Fourth, Syndicate Hill, Plainview, Hill Side, Tukev & Kevsers, Thornburg, Clark Place, Mvers & Richards, Bovds, And all the other Additions to the “City. Syndicate Hill Adjoins the stock yards property in South 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 &ub-division. Located in West Omaba, two blocks south of Leavenworth street, .. fine location aud the cheapest lots in Omaha; $1 25 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 » few lots left in Kirkwood addition, whi prices, terws b level ground and are desirable. 25 down balance $10 per month, Thes: lots are en high Hawthorne. This addihion is mcre centrally located than any other new addition near the best Schools in the city. the grades have nee ble residence property, only 1 adjoining #dditions for a home or investment. beaten, Fon SaLe -Lot on Davenport with fine house, §2,000, Yor Save—Full lot 215t and Clark street, 6 room house, 82,300, Fon SaLe—Besutiful acre lot in Gise's add. $1,200, Fon SaLe—} Jot on Chicago street between 13th and 14th, BravniroL lots comer Fernam and 20th street cheap. Fon SaLz—Lots in Walnut bill, £200, Fon Satz—} lob with 6 room house 21t stroot casy payments, $2,000, All the stre . : established by the city council, and is very desira- 5 blocks from Post office, prices lower than s are being put to grade These lots cannot be ¥or SaLe—Lot 28th and Farvam stroet, good property, 81,600 Fon 8ALE -4 acre on California, east of Sacred Heart; house, bara, an cistern, cheap o o —Lota In Hansoom placs each, g 15th street, with foR 5ALE—100 feet frout on 15th street, wi lm]nfluhl:ua just south of Hartman School, on- ly 81,700. Fon save—Full lot and b room housecorner 11th and Castellar, 82100, ¥on #ALz--Lot and 2 houses 18th and Nich. olas 85,000, Wewill furnish’ conveyance free to any partlof the city toshow property to our friends and customers, and cheerfully give injorma- tiongregardin Omaha Property. Those who have bargains‘to offer or wish property at wbaryain, are invited to see us, Bedford & Scouer, Real Estate Agents 2138, 14h St., bet. Farnam & Dougias

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