Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 18, 1885, Page 2

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2 ' THE DAILY BEE--THURSDAY, JUNE 18, 1885. way he did down eatt. (That boy hi winter’'s skating and rabbit hunting). The teacher made war on the old 0UT OF SCHOOL. BROWN'S IRON BITTERS WILL CURE HEADACHE A Evil Peroicions fo Papnlar EAD-| nen the storekeeper's wite, rocent li convert In the church and prominent in cation. the sewlng clrole, put her (war) paint on, hoisted the flag and lead a crusade against the teacher on the spelling racket. Indecornm Fostered by Neighbor-|other faneral was preached. Then the hood Comment—Teachers chucklehead of the region took his chil. not Calpable, dren from school because they were re- 2 quired to take languege lessons which he daidn’t want, and beosuse his glel was reprimanded for fdling. The largest o the Fditor of the Bee, palallag by 00 Lt glrl in school an e leader, said the el Ut d ypdiallig teacher was mean. She had been reprl- certaln utterances at the court house at| —ooac, "¢ being inattentive, and dis- the recent meoting of the County Teach- | posed to be* noisy and unroly, She ora’ aesoclation, On that ocoasion a pa- | finally left school. per was rend on the subject of school| ~WIith this glel it may be added, by way attendancs, the writer of which If of extenuation, that ‘““they do say’ that the store clerk was sweet on_her. With rightly understood, takes the ground BILIOUSNESS DYSPEPSIA NERVOUS PROSTRATION MALARIA CHILLS axp FEVERS F ING GENERAL DEBILITY PAIN v THE BACK & SIDES IMPURE BLOOD CONSTIPATION FEMALE INFIRMITIES RHEUMATISM him it was the seventh, with her, her that the teacher alone Is responsible for | firat mash, and at morning, noon and atrogular attendanco and abtence. The [night, threo times a day, they ‘“‘met by saot i chance, the usual way.” subject is Important and the statement Now‘ the Incorrigible and the deacon's NEURALGIA b gy S y4s g. How to secure regular and |p,pefal were great cronfes. The teacher KIDNEY AND LIVER punctual attendanco at school 18 the | boiracd ut the descon's. Then came tho TROUBLES i pressing problem. Irregular and non- | protracted meeting, with great religlous FOR SALE BY ALL nmffffllfi{f‘ attendance is the bane of our public|excltement and several converts to the The Genuine has Trade Mark and crossed Ri sehools. The solution of the problem Is | church. But the teacher seldom attend- Lines on o made — more urgent by theled, and when he did so, he report that the attendancs at some of [nelther spoke out’ fn meetlog nor the schools in this counfy is often down [on the ‘“‘ragged edge.” Thls was more almost to the zero polnt. Such a state |than fanaticism could bear, A corps, of affairs is certainly suggestive of the [composed of the deacons, deaconestes necsesity of an_imperative demand for [and daughters, with the new converte, reform,” To this slleged responsibility of | was formed, and a crusade inaugurated the teacher Idld not, at the time, have [agalnat the teacher on the religious an opportunity to respond, and I now racket. Another funeral was preached. wish to go on record. (The whole crusade outfit would have Now, the education of Amerlcan peo- |been obliged to have studied thelr ple is a vast undertaking of absorblng | primers before they could have taught and far reachlog interest. It fs in the |that party In morals or In anything interest of the people, including within | else.) g the range of its bencficence all the| And toaddto the complications, from dwellers in the land, the rich and the |the other end of the line came the super- poor, the great and the lowly, and the Intendent grim, like a dark and over- united effszts of many people are neces- [ banging cloud, shudowing the teacher sary to its successful accomplishment, In [throughout. this great educational enterpriee there| Let a little light on that shadowed and are three partles particularly responsible, | muddled affair. -y OLD THINGS PASSED AWAY, and that may be sald to be under a covenant in this respect. These parties are the community, the parent, and the teacher. The community is responsible for the beginning of the work, for the bullding of echool houses and the pay- ment of the bllls, for the opening of the schools, and for subsistence in the cam- paign agalnst Ignorance and vice; and above all fs the communlty responsible for a proper publlc sentiment. For no school can be elevated much above what public sentlment demands without being dragged downwards. Let the proper public sentiment pre- vall and the success of the educational enterprise is assured. The second of these contracting partles isthe parent. And here, If anywhere, is found excess of resposibility. For the school is for the child, and by nature the child {s in the care of the parent. All that the communlty and the teacher do in this matter s done In beha'f of the parent. In order that he be relieved, it {s his duty to see to the attendance of his child at school. And public sentiment ¢ BEST OPERATING SUICKEST SELLING AND {1727 PERTECT COURING STOVE T affered to the oubiic Now, I attended that echool every day of the term and I consider myself fortu- nate in being privileged to do so. Dauring that term I studled more and learned more than ever before or since In the same length of time in school, and had nelther occasion nor time to inaugurate a crusade against the teacher. I also con- slder 1t fortunate that I was not obliged to attend school there after that. Parties boomed for *hat echool by that superintendent and approved and indorsed by that eewing circle, didn’t sult me and mine. The following year I attended school in an adjoining county, and then went to an academy in the oity. Now that teacher, the opposition nevertheless, was right, and couldn’t have done different, and wasy a great Im- provement on his predecessors, all the fogies, kickers, those embryotic censors of the rewing machlne circle, and all such superintendents of the pumpkin roller order as that one was, to the con- trary notwlithstanding. To say that the teacher was the cause ought to be of a sort to demand of tho |Of that damaging display, that he was | parent the performance of that duty. | to blame for that display of ignorance The parent should not withhold from the |and fanaticism, tinctured with prejudice teacher his hearty sympathy and support. [8nd Intemperance, would be the length This {s a matter of daty and not of pref- jof absurdity. erence. The third of these contracting parties LD & C0'S. % 18 CONDUCTED BY Royal Havana Lottery | W. S. ANDERSON. OnmanA, June 15, 1885, (A GOVERNMENT INSTITUTION.) Orawn at Havana Cuba, Every 10 to 14 Days. in the educational enterprise is the teach- er,on whom rests very grave resposibili- tles. He {s the parent’s agent whose Tidists ln Pifths; wholes $5; Fractions pro-rata. | place he takes in the school room. On » i) }:.:m‘f‘“fi“fi";:l'“m‘;";’m 'g 3 the teacher, the agent of the parent, de- juze of chanoe I ;x'!s“u‘lné?n.m i pBendsb the -l;loh:ltelworl; of }:he acfhml or Mckets apply ., 1212 Brol ut the sppointed placs for the perform- L o Ay iCH M OTTENAI & (00, SloMAI B | {i g To, thnplpgem'a duty in this cnf: is the school room; and, therefore, in the nature of the case, the teach- er's responsiblity for the at- tendance of the pupil at school can not be more than inc!dental and voluntary. The teacher has undoubted responsibili- ties of sufficient weight without being saddled with that which beiongs else- where. That writer's utterances and {hs pear- fogs of this allegoment under considera- tion, on the compulsory attendance topic, Is worthy of notice. That writer favors a compulsory attendance law. That is, after declaring that the teacher alone 1s responzible for the attendance of the pupil at school, he invokes a law compelling the parent to perform that daty. It is submitted that to allow that this alleged responsibillty of the teacher is warranted by the facts in the case, ef- fectually knocks the bottom out of the compulsory attendancs law idea. 1 am an old man. For 28 years I guffored with ul- cers on my1ight leg as_the fesult of typhoid fover. Amputation was suggested a3 the only means of pre- serving life. The docters could do nothing for me, and thought T must dio. For three years 1 never had & shoo on. Swift's Specific has mado a perma- nent cure and added ten years to my life, Wi, R. Reep, Hall Co., Ca. 1 have taken Swift's Specific for blood potson con- tracted at a medical college at a dissection, while I was & modical student. 1 am grateful to sty that it gave mo oo, cody and thorough cure after my pa- routs haa speut hundreds of dollars for treatment. Auaustos Wexokr, M D., Newark, N. J. My wito from early girhood Bas been suffering from rheumatism. She has trisd many remodies, and [ must frankly y has derived more benefit from Switt's “pecifiv thaa from all tyo othors, after long and faithfal trial. REy. Jac. L. Prence, Oxford, Ga, Switt's Bpeoifio 18 enterely vegotablo, Treatlse on Bood and Skin Diseases mailed froo. WHISKY AND THE BRED SKINS: QOomplaints to the Local Federal Au thorlties — Why the Indian Should Not “Indulge, Taesday Asslstant United States At torney Bartlett received a lengthy letter from Maj. Wilkerson, of the Winnebago Indian agency, complaining of numerous abuses which are being practiced by the natlves toward the red men, The chlef point of complalnt In the letter fs the continued selling of liquor to the Indlans, on the part of certain miscreants who are more anxious to make money than they are to conform to the atatutes of the United Statee. Mr. Bartleit has promieed a speedy investigation and ad- justment of the grlevances, and has sent a special man to the reservation to in- quire into the matter and make any necessary arrests. The complaints which have hitherto been preferred agalnst For a fuller explanatlon of this alleged | white men for selling liguor without a responsibility of the teachers and its|license, have come entirely from the future bearings after illustrating the com [southern agzencies; so that this mat- plicatlon of school matters the following | ter Is to ba investigated for the firet time narrative may serve, the conclusions be- | with reference to the Winnebago agency lpg from apprehensions at the time and [which s situated in the northern part f subsequent consideratlon, the state, My earlier yesars were pasted in & dis-| The federal Jaws agzainst this crime are tant state then of the *‘wild west ' I|verystrict, Thematterof selling whirky lived in the country several miles from |to the red manis not so mucha crime the city. My home was near the nefgh- | per se, as when conzidered In connection borhood hamlet, with its crossroads | #ith its effects, The dueky son of the atore, postofiice, blacksmith shop and the |forest, say those who have control of little red school house in sight on the{him, is hard enough to manage 4lll, Here durlng a portion of the year ! whdn in sober condition. But when the 1 was accustomed to attend -school, ~the | element of *‘fire water” is to be consid- ohief task belng In the epelling book, | ered in the problem of how to manage Time and place considered the school [hilm, the question becomes doubly per- ranked falr, plexing. The Indlan, when whisky The teachers were after the.manner of | has strengthened every fibre of Intraoti- those of thelr day,/free and easy, of falr | bility in his being, {becomes, to use ex- powera, but without ing or syste- | pressive slang), *‘a holy terror,” and not plan for their work, and with [infrequently will endanger the llves of hardly an exception, were mere school- |the white settlers, For these reasons keepers, the greater portlon «of the federal authorities of Nebraska are belnginckleg lawgesq, who *‘they do ssy” | determined to strlctly enforce the im- were always willing to discuss lls “‘pint” | portant statutes bearing on this point. with the preacher. P Well, thus time passed on ti! I had reached:my fourteemthyear, whes.c man from the city was put in charge of the b school. e was a etranger, but trary to his predecessoss, ‘The SAwr Seacivic Co., Drawer 8, Atlanta, Ga,, 0 169 W. 28d 8t., N. Y. AFINE LINE OF Plinos & Orgal Al WOODBRIDGE BROS, THE ONLY EXOLUBIVE MUSIG HOUSE IN OMAHA' NEB. Town Lots in Denver Junction, Weld County, Colerado. Deuver Junction s » mew town of about 200 inhabilants, laid out in 1884, on the great railway aceoss the continent, at the junctien of the Julesbuxg Branch, 137 miles Denver, The town is on second bottom Those Who Will Speak, The High Sohool graduates, who have cured the | ment exerclses of that Institution, are land of the Platte River, ¢the finest location between Omaba and Denver, and is surround. | pasition, cot on the wecommendation of | Minnle OCbambers, Addie Hurlbart, ed by tho bast-laying lands west of Eearney | the superintondent, bat In spite of ihls| arrle Harlburt, Alice Rustin, Victorla Junction, Neb. ; climate heslthy and bracing; altitude liln) ln:..n ‘Dsnn: Jm::.fig-l‘r‘i)dlk e important point, as P, E: Co., are puitiog up m yof thelr buildings cellent ;:“u'ulkn‘.l:ll':.k‘l:g::;::t Overall, Minnie Thomas, Carl Johmson, toacker, #rained xad experlenced | Morrls Hall, and Howard Kennedy. The and of good .character, freo m the | graduates aumber alneteen, but, to glve usual pedsgree wawmpery and entangling | them all ae opportunity of saylug thelr alllances. He was sober, had good moe-|| little pieces, would ‘require nearly a als and habits, was an esrnest worker,(| Whole night, therefore it was thought and devoted te his businese. But hislj that those who were not auxious could ways In achool were new then. He con-§ be left ont. 3he wkole class, however, solldated some of the classes and every- ‘appear om the opera house stage and thing he taught was in the new way, pro- | Feseive their mas. duclog a sform among the fogles, ocoa- e slo) an absorl faubbub, Trap Shooting, , duzing the irst week of achool, | Ed. JLeeder returned Sueeday’ from the Sewlng Circle met In conclave avd | waterloo where he went Monday to shoot ::;l‘:?r:dint::wl;'gr‘:, gfi;}:’l ..‘:’é &:‘;‘.‘f off & match with Mahew, of Fremont, on The followiog tion, The exerciee of its assumed offielal | ® wager of §50.00 a slde. dutios then and there was to ridicule and | is the score: condemn the innovations In the school and to preach the teacher’s funersl, striking boldly out cn the geography | Mah racket. (I never knew a teacher before this to bound even his own state except|yoeder . In a very approximation manner), Immwe- diate resnlt of that proclamation: Oge boy's name stricken from the roll and the { 1 eeqer. scaccely everbe equalod elsewhere, For aale by the lot or block in good terma by H. M, WOOLMAN, Agent, Denver Junetion Colo. OMAHA SAVINGS BANK | Cor. 18th and Douglas Sts. Capital Btock, - - . $150,04¢ Liability of 8tockholders, 300,000 Five Per Cent meln Paid on Depesi's LOANS MADE ON REAL BSTATZ.. —— OMosyrs o Dircotors TAMKS £ BOYD .. . Prosident LIVE BIRDS, £ kNN, ! Bissctor | ity school diogly | d . M. ). ¥ Dirsetor 'y school eorresponding! neressed, é%fi:'i:g‘;g:; ik Caghicr | The arlthmetic nnnkywn the next 3. W GANNNYY, Kk "¢ Lkicker. He took bis boy from ohool be- HENRY PUNDY B, cauge the boy didn't learn to cipher the ! Maiy “Bluehack” spelling book and ousted it. | The Dedication of the W, O, T. U, Rooms—The New Quarters. The dedication of the Buckingham to An. |its new purpose in the hands of the Woman’s Christian Temperance Unlon washeld Taesdsy night in connection with the formal reception, The auditorum was comfortably filled. The exerclses were varied and Interesting, belng pre- sided over by the president of the local Unlon, Mrs, Gratton, Rev. W. J. Harsha dellvered the opening sermon, notising the great change that had been wrought, and pre- senting in _an earnest forcible way, the |! need of thorough consclentious gospel work in the locallty which has been fu- vaded by the brave women of the Union. He was followed by others speakers in five-minute talks, among them Gen, O, 0. Howard, Rev. W. E, OCopeland, A. D. Jones, and Col. Chase. A. D. Jones' speech, delivered In his own style of unctaous humor, was greatly enjoyed by the auditors, The muslc of the evening was rendered by a epecial choir, under the ekillfal leadership of Franklin S. Smith, and furnished one of the most enjoyable f ea tures of the dedleatory exercises. After the speaking and singlng were over, the company repaired to the lunch rooms, where an enjoyable repast was served. The rcoms of the once dirty and be- feuled Buckingham theater have under- gone a vast and wonderfal change. The transformation Indeed, s so great that the old and new seem to have nothing in common. The auditorlum part of the bullding has been thoroughly cleaned and painted and furnished with chairs which afford a seating capacity of several hundred, The apartments Immediately north of the au- dience room, which were ,formerly occu- pled by the wine and dressing rooms, have been entirely remodeled and thrown into one, and carpeted, papered and painted. This s called the reading room, and is provided with chalrs, tables, etc. It s the most cosy and homelike department of the establish- ment. The next room, once occupied by the bar and office of the theatre, has been changed into a lunch room, having been cleaned, repainted and provided with ofl- cloth matting. The appolntments of all the rooms are comfortable, convenient and In perfect taste. The ladles of the Woman's Christian Temperance Unlon are to be congratulated upon thelr new quarters, and upon the auspicious man— ner in which their brave work In the de- graded part of the clty has been opened. e — THE BAY STATE COMPANY. The Directors Arrive in [Omaha —Their Tour Westward, In the Vermont Centralspecial car*‘Gar field” there arrivedat ten o’clock yesterday morning the members of the dl rectory of the Bay State Land and Cattle company, in all sixteen gentlomen as follows: G. W. Simpson, M. B. Boynton, C. W. Plerce, Q. Lowell, F. Reitenbach, Chas. A. Vialle, J. Niles, Geo. F. Blake, N. B. Plumer, all of Boston; J. H. Kimball, Bath, Me.; S. S. Kimball, Concord, N, H.; 5 Comstock, Providence, R. I.; J. P. Har- ris, Salem, Mass ; J. P, Robiuson, S. W. Patten, Bangor, Me. The gentlemen were met at the depot by Mr. John A, McShane, the superin- tendent of the company, and escorted to to the Millard hotel. After dinner, un- der the guidance of Mr. McShane and others the party was driven about the olty and out to the stock yards. Proper efforts were mado to Impress the visitors with the growlng importance of Omaha 88 a stock centre, and {n this direction admirable saccess was attalned. All of them express themselves as much pleased, not to say astonished, at the growth of the etock Interests of this city, and ex. preas a bellef in the coming importance of this point as the grea cattle mart for the northwest. They awaited the arrlval of Mr. George H. Hammond here last night, desiring es- pecially to see and confer with him, The journey westward will be continued to- day by special courtesy of the com- peny onthe Union Pacific lines. They will go to the ranches of the compeny, near Antelopeviile, arrlving there in time to witness the grand annual round-vp and “‘calf-branding.” 3 From Mr. Arthur E, Sproul, a gentle- manly reprecentatlve of the Boston Herald, who is traveling with the party, it was learned that the directors hsd left Boston on the 11th Inst.,traveling west, via Montreal, and over the Grand Trunk, arrlving In Chicsgo Sunday., There they spent theday, and left Monday morning for Monticello, Towa, where Mr, Simp- son, the president of the company has extensive creamery interests. Thence they proceeded Omahaward, on a speclal over the C, M., St. P. & O. Thelr trip westward 1s solely one of pleasure. Mauy of the directors have never seen the ranches of the company, and, o course, feel a natural interest In the in- spection, which will be tha main object of the trlp, The Bay State company is one of the largest lnstitutions of its kind In the world, owning extenslve ranges in Ne- brasks, Colorado and Wyoming. They have on their ranches this year about C. Melvin, L, V. company that has had during the' past distillery 1,900 head of ocattle, from which were taken the first cattle killed by the beef-packing establishment of Ham- mond & S 3 The officers of the enmplng re George W. Simpson, President; M. B, Boynton, vice-president; G. R. Chamberlain, sec- retary and treasurer,and J, A, McShane, general superintendent. Malitary Notes, In addition to his duties as acting as- sistant quartermaster at these headquar- ters, First Lleutenant Joseph A. Sladen, Fourteenth infantry, aid-de-camp, will take charge of the office of the Inspector general cf the department until the ar- elyal of Msjor Robert H. Hall, Twenty- second Infantry. The contribations to the prizes for the coming rifle confest are slowly but surely comlngin. S P. Morse has slgoified bis Intention cf rals og & purse of $50, Kaufman Bros will contribute a $15 box of imported cigars, while other prizes have been offcred. Gen, Cowin and Judge Savage have alao nified thelr willingneis to aasist in the work of raising & purse representing the prize offer of the local bar, It is probable that most of the posts cf the department will offer prizes, Fort Washakle has been Leard from, and will raise & purte of §20, 95,000 head of stock., It s this same | winter on feed at the Willow Spriugs |5 RED STAR AN TRADE \ a¥n/ MARK: 7 STARN thsolutely Free from Opiates, Emetics and Poisons A PROMPT, SAFE, SURE CURE For Congelis, Bare Thron Colds, TEr ONPANY, taryfand, U, 8 A, DOCTOR WHITTIER St Uharies 86, 86 Gonis Arising fro ¢ Indulgence, MARRIAGE CUID plates, Dlustrated 1 ) Chartered by theStateofIili- nois for theexpress purpose of giving immediate relietin all chronic, urinary and pri- fvate diseases. Gonorrheea, § Gicet andSyphilis inall their ¥ complicated forms, also all diseases of the Skin and Blood promptly relieved and permanentlycured by reme- / dies, testedina Forty Years 4 Special Practice. Seminal Weakness, Nignt Losses by Dreams, Pimples on the Face, Lost Manhood, positively cured. There 8 no cxperimenting. The appropriate remedy 18 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 sénder, Address DR.JAMES,No. 204Washington St.,Chicago, Il D ———————— THEONLY TRUL § IRON IL.OOSE’S BEXTRACT Red Glover Blossom cuREs — Cancerxrs. - Irmaca, Mich., Feb, 8, 1 3. M. Loose & Co., MOXROR, Mich. b i 1 am uslng your Fluid Extract Red Clover ‘Wet Conipress for Cancer on the breast, and am well. 1 am satisfled it is the best remedy for Cancer known, You aro welcome to use this for the Ronefit of sutforing humanity, Respectfully, MRS, L A JOHNSON, Scrofula. ToxEpo, 0., January 17, 153 pppy .y ‘she has exporien s 15 buta slight testimonial of my approciation of your efforts n_behalf of humanity, which you are Welcome to use for their benefit, H. ARMS, i L iy, Erysipelas. 7.3, Looss & Co., Mownon, Mg O Deo 1sty 1852 oAt 'Wo years ago, for kr fvabiee since. It 13 Lo EFrovwver &Hores. R. B. flyman, of Grand Rapids, Mich., says—After #wo Doctorsadvised him (0 usa Looso's Ext. Ked Clover xor-a bud case of Eczoma, or Fever Sore on the Jeg Unly usedtwo pounds of your Solid Extract liod Clover Am now wel. nA3aSoring Medteing Tonto and fenersl Tiood Purk er it has o equal. For salo ruggists, or J, 10040 & o., Monroe, Mich: i | Manhood Restored ¥ FREE—A victim of youthfulimpradence fhusing Premature Decay, Nervous Debility, Loxt anhiood, &c., having tried in vain every known edy.hias discovered a simple means of solf-curo, Btallion, Jack, Sheppard Jr. ‘Wil stand for stock a% Omaha ‘Falr grounds the season of 1885, Hels 104 hands b igh, weight 128! his elre JAcK BuEPPARD |8 full brother in blood to R 2: DicTaToR the f JAY: 1] == 2 £ 1115 ] g E COWING & CO. WROUGHT IRON PIPE, FXLTXINGr WINDMILL AND DRI Plumbers' Gas and steam Fitters' IRON & BRASS 600DS, ENGINEERS' SUFPLIES, A4th & Dodae Sts.-.OMAHA.NEB. Imported Beer IN BOTTLES. Bavaria "Bremen s .8t. Louls Milwaukee | Schlitz P Milwaukee Omaha | Ale, Porter, Domestic and Rhine Wines. ED MAURER, 1218 Farnam 8t. DREXEL & MAUL, (#UCCESS0RS T0 JOHN G JACOEN UNDERTAKERS Af the old stand 1417 Faraam B4, Crders by bele il:‘;‘owmndplmyfl sttended b0, Telrpion: RealEstate BEDFORD & SOUER 23 S. [4th STREET, BET. FARNAM AND DOUGLAS. Have a large list of inside business and resi- dence property, and soime of the finest suburban property in and around the city. We have business property cn Capitol Avenue, Dodge, Douglae, Farnam, Harney, Howard, 9th, 10th, 13th and 16th sreets, We have fine residence property on Farnam, Douglas, James Medical Institute Dadge, Davenport, Chicago, Cass, California streets, Sher~ man, §t Marys and Park Avenues, in fact on all the best residence streets, We have property in the following ad- ditions. Hawthorne- Millard & Caldwell’s Lakes, Elizabeth*Place E. V.Smith’s, Horbach’s, Patrick’s Parker’s, Shinn’s, Gise’s, McCormick’s, Kountz & Ruth’s, Impr'nt Association Wilcox, Burr Oak, Isaac & Seldon’ss Hanscom'’s West Omaha, Grand View, Credit Foncier, Nelson’s, Kountz’ First Armstrons’s? Kountz' Second, Godfrev’s, Kountz' Third, Lowe’s, Kountz’ Fourth, Kirkwood, College Place, Park Place, Walnu e Hill, West End, Boogs &Hill' Capitoel, Reed’s First, Svandicate Hill, Plainview, Hill Side, Tukev & Kevsors, Thornburg, Clark Place, Myvers & Richards, ; 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 Omaha, two blocks gonth of Leavenworth str fine lncation and the cheapest lots in Omaha; $125 for inside lots $150 for corners; terms $10 down, balance 83 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 $25 down balance $10 per month, These lots are on high level ground and are desirable. Hawthorne. This addition is mere 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 neen established by the city council, and 13 very desira- ble residence property, only 16 blocks from Post office, prices lower than adjoining additions for a home or investment. These lots cannot be beaten. For Sate—Lot 28th and Karnam street, good property, $1,600, For saLe—4 sacre on California, east of Sacred Heart; house, bara, an? cistern, ALE—Lots in Hanscom place each, For SaLe~Lot on Davenport with fine house. §2,000, For SaLe—Full lot 21st and Clark street, 6 room house, 82,800, For SaLe—Beautiful acre lot in Gise's add. A 4 1ot on Chicago street between For SaLe— 4 Jot on Chicago s Wi e Ty with 168 And 14, B8 R ot of Fortman Satochon- uB::vl"nmn lots corner Fyrnam and 20th Iy $1,700. s oty SUMR —Full lot and 6 room housecorner Fon SaLz—Lots inWalaut hill, 8200, pon ATl 1 . For SaLE—} lot with 6 room house 21st( Fop saLi—Lot and 2 houses 13th and Nich. stroet easy poyments, $2,000, olas 85,000, We will furnish conveyance Jree to any part of the city toshow property t? our [riends and customers, and cheerfully give' informa- tionZregardin Omaha Property. Those who have bargains‘to offer or wish property at abargain, are invited to see us. A Bedford & Souer, Estate Agenis Real 2138, (3th St., bet. Farnam & Douelas

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