Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 2, 1885, Page 2

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5 e 2 THE DAILY BEE--I'HURSDAY, JULY 2, 1885. — A DEPART- | Davis Is recalled hers the more will all good citizenship, as by him exemplified, be praised. THE CHAMFPION & Juhn Kuntz Beating His Way Acruss the Oontinent, AGRICULTURAL MENT. DYSPEPSIA ™ s & dangerous as well as distressing complaint. It How Congressmen Work Their Rural ing e tone cf the eystem, to prepars the way Oonstituents, ino. BHowE SADHEAD, Washington Oorrespondence Cleveland (Ohio) Leader, The agricultural department has been 8o much dlscussed in the papers of late ki that a descrlption of it will not be out of [ Prrrsnvrc, June 27.—John Kuntz, place. Its building is located on & hill | who Is travelling on a wager of $2,000 at tho left of the monument, within half [from New York to San Francisco, ar- amile of the White House, and just |rived here to-night. He has undertaken across the way from the red pressed brick | to deadhead his way acrots the continent factory in which the greenbacks are|[Insix weeks without walking a mile or- made. On the other slde the medlwval [spending a cent of his own money. towers of the Smithsonian, looking Itke | William J. Simms accompantes him. He some old castle of the twelfth centary, [was selected by both partles to see that and directly in front of it, across the | the conditions of the wager are falthfully lawn, can ba scen the dazzling whiteness | cartied ont. Kantzeald he beat his way of the Ebbitt house, with a multitade of | from Maine to San Francisco once before, blg and little buildings around it. The|ICuntz epent a gread deal of his time at agricultural building ifself is of red brick | the stock yards in New York, where he with terracotta trimmings, Itis for all|frequently entertalned the drovers with f: — THE BEST TONIC. LI GNIWKCO3Y S1SI99NYA ONV SNYIJISAHD jekly and plet~ly " %) g in all g"’,‘,‘,.g"{i:""'{j"":! o fera |-'"u:.“ P ’:i'lflfilvul?;‘ the world like & oross beiween & Sira-|recitals of his travels, Ons of them, st tho wopei o toga trunk and a sarcophagus of some |John Benzinger, seemed to take especial otonant 5 noble Roman. Beautiful grounds sum|delight in listening to them. Jobn round it, A drlve of Trinidad asphalt|Holmes, another drover, offered to bet leads up to It, and {rees and shrubs of| hat Kuntz could not travel deadhead almost every varioty known fill its lawn, | to San Francisco In six weeks, and a The building stands upon a plateau, and [ Wager of $2,000 was made between the In front of it are flowers cf all the colors | drovers, : W 5 of the ralnbow, arranged in all the var.| ¢‘The conditions wore,” sald Kunfz, fety possible by the gardener's art. At|‘‘that I wasto start on Monday night, the right, as you go up, nearest the bank- [ and that I was to havo neither food nor note factory, thero Is a long greenhouse | money. If I accepted any from strangers in which flowors and plants are growing, [ L was to hand it to Mr. Simms, who 1 strolled through fts varions rooms. and [ would buy s meal for mo—a singlo meal in one I eaw lucious grapes hanging in | —from the sum I recelved, no matter if clustera from ita glass ceiling, ripe and |1t was 810. I have t» hunt for overy ready to eat. Iasked my guide whom |meal I eat, I must ride the whole dis- they were grown for, and he replled: tance, deadheading {t, and cannot walk “The congressmen send orders for|more than a mile from the station at any them and we send them off to them.” [Dlace whers we happen to stop. Mr. ““They don’t ask to have thom sent out | Simma follows me constantly, and if I of the city?” eald I in surprise. get put off he gets offto. If I win half “‘Oh, don’t they " was his emphatic|the money is mine. reaponse. fii = ““Well, 1 should eay they do, and they The F'an in Church, get them, too,” The report of the sermon delivered by ) N S The agricultaral department, just here, | the Rov. Henry Ward Bescher Sunday ’ \ N 1s more of an electloneering bureau for | evening, says that the d stingulshed di- i), \ TN congressmen than It is & department for | vine lectured the ladies humorcnsly upon ! A the good of the farmers. Many a man the uee of the fan, ‘“‘reminding them that B TR 3 slts in the halls of congress to-day who [® #mall fan was suitable to a handsome L\ \Q \ \ | holds his place largely by the seeds and |face, while its violent motion would not \\\S), %) \\ documents which he senks out from {hls |#nnoy invallds and nervous people so . "~ | burean at government expenso. Ben L | much as a large one, nor would it create g u s BROAD GLANN . wogine [Fevre, for instance, has a complete |80 much draft to she possibls discomfort : bureau here by which he reaches every [of one’sneighbors, and especially to the #0.8 BEST OPERATING farmer in his dlstrict, and through theee [defrlment of the man who catches cold % these seeds he malntains his hold upon |e8slly trom adraught on the back of his SUICEEST SELLIE AND |his constituents. Each congressman has | heck.” A correspondent in the Christian . 5 5,000 packages of eeeds to send out|liegieter speaks on the same eubject as s ‘!flRPqflT GHGKING STUV through his distrlct every year. He can | follows:— Aikes & ulld bt v e affered to the nubtis “Havi and Indigestion, T mending it highly and invigorator, ar Gennino has b i, otc,, given away by al mailed to any address on re b u procure more secds it he wants them, and | Ltdles, why will you, why must you, every farmer who reads thls letter, | fav, fan, fan? Through the Sorlpture whother he be democrat or republicsn, | reading, through the singing, through the should write to his congressman and de- [ sermon, goes on the Incessant swinging mand his quota, He should not be put [©f the fan. Do you not know that, as off with excuses, The congressman has [ commonly used, three-fourths of all the the secds and ought to furnish them. He|Power of the fan {s expended upon the must not forget, also, that there are both | head, neck, and shoulders of the sitter in flower seeds and vegetable seeds, as well [ the pew in front of you! The writer has in taxes over §600,000 a year for this . i | yory parpose, and the poople have the | Stbject, and 1Is prepared to aesert and suits of the expenditure. and In other public places is slmply a The museum of the agricaltural depart- | habit, which, as a rule, reeults in no ment is one of the Interesting sights at | benefit to the user, but is often the csuse Washlogton, It isaroom covering the|Of grest dlscomfort to her neigbors. space of a good-sizad clty house, filled | NOW, this Is really a serlous matter, in with frolt and vegetables of all kinda in | these daye, when you ladies so far out- plaster of Paris, so paluted as to look like | Aumber the men at church. Who can|fl the origlnal. Case after case of orangee, strawberrles, of watermelors and pump- dross, ¥, D. 186 South Clark Strect, Cir 18 CONDUOTED BY Royal Havana Lottery | (A QOVERNMENT INSTITUTION.) Drawn at Havana Cuba, Every 10 to 14 Days. Tickets in Fifths; wholos §5; Fracti t i Babject 40 46 Meopsas, mr o PO TMt0 o |its Droco:s of making, from the cane to | back hair, articaln intorost. It Ia the falrest hing Inthe [the completed product, may be here “:::‘“‘:‘,'k‘;t":;;{;' ‘?'s':l“."l;';'“.m” 1219 Broaa | 8tudled. The rooms of the entomologlst way,N. Y. City;, or M.OTTENS & 00, 019 Main 5t. | are rapldly Increasing, and here you msy Kangas Citv, Mo. see all kinds of bugs and worms which affllct the farmer., A number of silk YOUNG MEN!—READ THIS, I.oosn’s worms at work stand upon one of the| Tuk Vorraic Bert Co., of Marshall, Mich., tables at the museum, and the student | offer to send their celebrated BLECTRO-VOL. BEXETRACT and bugology. m r} X DELD) Tho seed dopartmont usad to bo kopt | nd wmanhocd, wnd ab Mad tnostion " b CancCexr s, »« Irnaca, Mich., Feb, 8, 1588 in the basement. It ls now In the butld- | for rheumatism, neuralgia, paralysis, Anu_' ing devoted to the olvil service commis- | many other diseases, QOomplete restoration slon. Its rooms look like those of a big [to health, vigor and manhood guaranteed. flouring mill or warehouse, and in the fif’n;é‘dk “”v'?:C“{;°d' a “‘"ty' d“-’if'"‘“l is o e etract Bed clover | f€8201 of distribution they are plled fall | Samunist foae v them at once for illustrated 4“x":.:".'.“x'l'lfi’&'ffi-cffl?'m?r‘e'fno'.’t';‘n':-’ of twe-bushel bags of various kinds of e —— (Gancerknown. | You aro wilcomo to uso this fo7 the sends. The long hall from which the| Mrs. Bayard, after the manner of the old BnfimautTy e 1, 4. JomNsON, |#ecds are sent away is fall of tables, and | 5chool, woars a head.dress of lace from under { - In flush times a bevy of pretty glrls aro [ Which peop rows of littlo guay curls, Scrofula. ’ S 3,M. Toos® & Qo Woxnor A, Ot JAIUATY 7, 1888 engaged In patting them up and dlrect- ing them to those persons whom the con- G XY wifo hias ime t with sommething Ko berotoios lfl:&n’fi .‘."?T?x’}.??u“fi‘[ ble for & part of the absenteeism? You kinds of nuts, grasses and woods. Wheats | ful and considerate of othere, but—Well, and grains of all kinds are put in bottles; | Perhaps you have never thought of it cotton and cane are shown in their varl-[untll now. Remember, we who sit in e It is said that the average yield of petrole um wells in Caucasia is sixtecn times as good as that of American wells, Three Reasons Why every one needs, and should take Hood's Sareaparilla In the spring:— 1st: Because tho syst:m is now In its greatest need. Hood's Sareaparilla gives strength. 2d: Be ause_ ths bleod {s slugglsh and mpure Hood’s Sarsaparilla purifies. 3d: Because, from the above facts, Hood’s Sarsaparilla will do a greater gressmen designate, The vegetable seeds are put up in plnt or quart pack- ages. They are sewed up in little bags, Flower seeds are in small papers, and Aty L A0, very rospecttully, H. ARMB, polnto;as are generally sent away In pack- = ' |ages of two or thrze. Last year, I am .gnrysz @ LSS |told, threo million packagos were sent off, 2.4, Looan & 0o, Moxnon A% O Deo. 18t, 1882 | iyt the funds of the department are now s aanmenced taking your Ext. Red Clover, | exhausted, it is said, snd the only seed St ahegaro your xtriet o am hnpg’ €0 say she has experience vl BUEL alcheceimon T oy g Fechidon i eiforta n behaif of humaniiy, Feloio t e for thelr benei . 1>* WHCh You are Yy hi awo d - fivuntea i T By it i xiin'Sos | which the departmont has In excesn i smountiobianod nowthay int ! anyfothies i L-E W. M. sEmERT, [abonta ton of red beet, which, I sup. | me. Take it now. ———— “F = Mr, Lorl {n, oo ores. poee, Mr, Loring got at a bargain, R. B, loh.s S yscafter The Late Perry Davis, ato of ezema, or ¥over Koro'an the It | Providence Journal, a bad o o y nsed two pounds of your Solid Extract 10w wel . ‘ Spring Medlelne Tonto and general Blood Pur | The New York Tribune, ionceently| my, ] flfi?&:fi?&fifi'fi% Eriiste, or . % | followed by other papers, published re- | the n;;;e"t(iacg fr'?°‘?3|°.'2?m7§2'3:"‘|‘1'fi.2‘.’.,“fi'1 Cpiikakhe s LR ;)untly an alleged dispateh from Pltteburg | pared h(y Dr. J. G, B, Siegert & Sons, Be- P " | Pennsylvania, of the most sensational [ware of counterfeits, Ask your grocer or Cancer of the Tongue, |and wholly untruthful character in regard | drugsist for tho genuino article, —_— to Perry Davls, representing him as still g A'cne Resombling that of (i'a:n Grant. allve and in an almshouse, with elabora- o ten yearsago 1 bad a scrofulous sore onmy | tions of style and statement caloulated to o troat e bl ot s i sats | wound tho foellng of his frlends, Why —————— Deen driven Into the wytem by ihe use of potash such falso allegations should have been Rupture, Breach or Hernia, N a o ARG SR A LN "what some of thy | Published it 1s Impossible to conceive. | permanently cured or no pay. The worat doctors cailed cuncer, eating through my cheok, do- Mr. Davis died yesrs ago; he was 8 well- | cases guaranteed! Pamphlet and ref- :‘..'2#:5 (= .'g ‘x:: ,In)‘u::un‘z\hdnllél:\-cgll’ifi:"fl:‘:’;’;o:‘:fi: l}()nnw'n and highly esteemed cltizen of | erences, two three cent stamps. World’s the palate and under lip entirely aud ka f my tonguo | Providence; he acquired a fortune by his| Dispensary Medical Assoclation, 663 @ating out to the top of my leti check bone and up | industry, and the intrinslc value of the|Main street, Buffalo. N. Y. €0 tho lofh eye. I cod not eat any salld ‘tood, but | ynadioing ho sold; b kind hearted; 2 . . subsisted on liquids, and my tongue was so far gone | Medlolne ho sold; he was kind hearted; Toould not talk, Such wai my vnfgg d, heipless | he gave the Stewart Street church which dition the first of | i atin cs stopped an ; —— ‘healing commenced, and the fearful apature inmy | it was medest. A good-cltizen, an exem-| Gon, Logan will continue to be k to sk as baen olohd sod €rsly it siher. | plary Chrlstian, & man who used his | fame; a trado mark bus been Kranted for|’ ‘aubitho tongtio whish was almost destroyed 1s bi- | talents as the Now Testamont prescribes, | “Black Jack ” chewiog gum. O vared: 8l s thab naturo ls supplylog | his memory remains here where he dwelt 1t iu asserted that within liying memory the death of no foreigner haa excited such sympa- thytlu Rome as that o fyoung Ldward Pierre- pont, R — 4 The army of the United States, on a war footing, numbers 3,750,000 men—the largest military establishment in the world, L — The highest prizs at the New Orleans ex- position for oranges was won by Massachu- setts men, together, —— Horsford's Acid Phosphate, a 1 :‘:.‘: ’M:::l‘fiu.n" ul:‘;:,“':fikm::mg?.‘:nil; ."-';'»fid ;'.‘: 0 ;:d %hddp:;clo:- to thoi-a who were PGS S agaln. Jf any doubt these facts I would refer them | benefittes y his bounties, as to his PETIZER, RS Sl }f'!."[,';j',:'f,?‘b:'é‘f;x_ 6 9| family having so much reason to love and Moxgis Ginns, Howard City, MRS, MARY L. COMER, |vespect him, , says: “‘I am greatly pleased with TAGININS, O May 14, 1RAS, e el e 1t soems the very irony of fate that one | it as a tonle; it is an agreeable and good Tun Bwier Srscivic Co, Drawer 8, Atlanta, Ga. | Who paesed away with the esteem of all|appetizer.” N. Y., 167 W, 25 8t. who knew him, should now after so long a time be held up as living as an object of pltly or eontellnpt; that In order to create a sensatlon regardless alike of Tndian: truth and of decency, wholly indifferent .-ufin which i.. &flfi:{xyb'x'ufi.\.':’mi Fn?‘:linng to the tenderest sesibllities of the living, | well, a paper like the Tribune should Invade with coarse libel the pracincts of the family and {nsult the sentiment of a com- muuplty, In so far uch a paper s con- cerned there would appear to bs no eafe- guards whatever; but in thls olty and state, the llfe and beneficence of Mr, Davls are too well understood for any In- — jurious resnlt from such ignorant cr ma-| The northern (Tnd ) penitentiary has 706 licious publication, Perry Davls per- | convicts, formed bis datles as & man In such wise + The next orange crop of Florida is expected to be worth $2,000,000, + | Chlldren need not be kep: from school 1f coughs and colds are promptly treated with Red Star Cough Cure, 4 1t said that the paper mill now being built at Kaukaana (Wis.), will be the largest in existonce | Imp;;teiim Beer IN BOTTLES, 4 Decatur olaims & population between 19,- f agood name, The only effcct, save a| Hunt's (Kiduey and Liver) Remedy is The One Girl Crand Army of the Republic to decorate this grave on Memorial day with as many and as beautifal flowors as sny of the graves of the other soldlors borled here. It has been a castom, too, to dellver the orations from near Miss Humbert's rest- ing-place, the old veterans seeming to think this one woman's grave a fitting place to recall the memories of the con- teat. right to demand that they recelve the re- | m&intain that the use of the fon at church | daring that time. the volunteer servico arrlved just a short time before her death. eay that the fan nuisance {s not responsi- | doing so ihls time. late in the evening of Memorlal day by kins are here displayed, together with all do not mean to bs otherwlse than thonght- | some members of the Grand Army that her grave hsd been neglected. were out of flowers by that time, but the next day her grave was literally covered ous varletles, and American sugar, with | front of you have nelther bonnets nor|with the chofsest plants, and the duty of marking the grave which hed been so long neglected was talked over. Spler, 83 Decatur street, Boston, “Brown's Iron Bltters is just the thing for building one up.” “MIs$ HUMBERY." —tum— Soldier Dead, Pittsburg Commercial Gazette, In the Unlondale cemetry there fr. among the many soldiers’ graves, one that or twenty years has remained unmarked, except for the planting of flowers now and then by the hands of friends who still re. member with love and sffection the mem- ory of the one resting there. the last arrangments were made,and soon that mound will be marked with a mona- ment erected by Posts 88, 198, and 162 of the G. A, R, Mary E. Humbert, who gave her life to her country during the civil war. Yesterday It is the grave of Miss For years it has been the custom of the Mies Humbert was a nurse during the Iast year of the war and died from camp fever contracted while In actlve service at the Loulsyllle, Ky., ho:pltal, entered the service in February, 1864, and served till the summer of 1865, and was the youngest nurse In the service. She was the daughter of the late (ieorge Humbert, of Sandusky street, Allegheny. When the war broke out and the call for nuracs was made, she wanted to go, the entreatles of her friends prevailed and she remained at home. She But she could not stay. She felt it to 6 as much her duty to eerve her country in this way as it was for a man ‘to take p his musket. At last when the sani- tary commlsion made its urgent call dur- ing the winter of 18G3-4, she obtained the consent of her frlends and went to Washington and was assigned to duty In the Emery hospltal in the diet depart- ment, Hunnings, Miss Fowler, Mies Little, and Miss Murdock went with her and all served in the samo hospltal. At the same tlme Miss Emlly She was then In her 21st year, and Is desorlbed as a stately and beautifal woman, highly accomplished and of most tender and winning dispositlon. She made friends wherever ehe went, and it was not long till Miss IHumbert was a favorite throughout the entire hospltsl. Her special daties were in the diet.de- partment, preparing proper food for the | sick and wounded, but she found time for daty in the hospital wards. ters shows that a large part of her time was epent in corresponding for the wounded soldlers, Her lot- 1o the late spring of 1865 she was ordered to report for duty at the Louls- vl A Fawcett, 88 potatoes and grass, The country pays|®uffered long in silence, waking the |time when she was taken eick. while, as oceasion cffered, a study of the [friends brought her home, but she only ltved sixteen days snd was unconscious {lle hospital along with Miss Emma Sho was only there a short Her Her discharge from The custom of decorating her grave by the veterans was overlooked this year. Her sisters have been in the habit of marking her grave with the customary ag, but sickness prevented them from It was dlscovered They Poet 38 took the Initial step and ap- pointed a committee to purchese a sulta- blo stone. terday the committee of Post 128 wasap- pointed. The committees have not yet decided of what the monument shall TAIC BELT and othor ELkctrio ArpLIANCES | consist but they are determined that the on trial for thirty days, to men (young or old) | grave cf the only Allegheny girl who en- listed In the volunteer service sktall be roperly marked. Post 162 followed, and yes- ————— he Artful Dodger. Sewer gas dodges past Imperfect traps confusing the sanitary engineer, bsfliing the doctor, house and killing you, or making you an invalid, businest. ed Brown's Iron Bitters can .do wonders for you. riching your blood, taking possession of your If you are dead that clotea the 1f you are orippled or poison- Dodge the artfal dodger by en- invigorating your stem and enjoylng good health, Mrs eays —e— The sheriff of Cerro Gordo county re- tarned to Mason city Friday, haviog in s charge Roger McDevitt, whom ho captared in Wyoming. McDevitt jumped his bonds eome weeks ago while waiting trlal on the charge of attempted rape on a Miss Rhodes of that county, + Biliousness Is very prevalent at this sesson, the symptoms belng bltter taste, offensive breath. coated tongue, slck headache, drowsiness, dlzzlness, loss of appetite. 1f this condition is allowed to continue, serlous consequences may follow. By promptly taking Hood's Sarsaparilla, a fever may be avolded or prematnre death prevented. for billlousness. It fsa positive cure Sold by all drugglsts, # Mary Andereon is an expert rower. | There are no Sunday newspapers in Vienna, | Americans have $125,000,000 invested in Mexican railways. | When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoris, When sho was a Child, she cried for Castoria, ‘When she became Miss, When sho had Childres, s clang to Castoria, gavo thom Castoria e ARLI THE BEST THING OUT to ¢ d thy d of the wise and FOB g NOrthy i ELe bas fafh oenlth fa | 000 aRa't4, 00 IWashing & Bleaching DREXEL & MAUJ or Soft, Hot or Cold Water, o | Erlanger........ Bavaria | Culmbach s Bavaria 8 Tn Hard Pilsner. . Bohemian | Kalser Browen | Momentary aunoyante to his desoend. | excellent in all of the disesses of females, | saves LABOR, TINE and’ B0AP AMAZINGLY, and glves Batweeare b LONMTG st. Louts § 388, of the reckless story of the Tribune, | For delicate women, no medicine equels [ dulvorsalsatistaction, No family rich or poor should Bos Miwaukeo | Sehlitz P luierMiwaukes | #il1 b8 to recall to thoss who may see or |it. h'&:l“fi:‘;"xl‘l’“;mmrt Krug’ Owaba | Ale, Porter, Domestioand | hear of it, the virtues of one who was il A celebrated doctor ssys tnat ‘‘Hont's | sgne | to mislead. PraRLINK is the oxLY Jhiae Wines | lustrious, prudent, cbaritable and a Chris: | Remedy 1s a sure cure for heart disease, 1218 Farnam 8t, | tiaa, The more the meme of Perryand there is no substitute ) ED MAURER, saving compound snd always bel AmlJnlmu of bears tho ab AMES PYLE NEW YORK, | g Among Allegheny's but ReoSmn N raAnz\n:,/ MARK LGANTLI LOCATED. Large Lots at Reason- able Prices. A Good Investment South Omaha, Sincethe completion of the new packing and slaughter houses, South Omaha is mak- ing a wonderful ane rapid growth. Besides the large pork and beef house erected for Hammond & Co., other dealers have com- menced the erection of similar institutions and still others are contemplated for the near future. fSeveral dwellings have been built and twenty or thirty are now building. Employment is now furnished to about one hundred and fifty families, and conservative estimates place the figure at eight hundred to one thousand families that will find em- ploymuent there a year hence. ~ This offers great inducements to Jaboring men to secure homes now while they are cheap. Specula- tors will ulso find it to their advantage to buy at present prices. The company liave made no change from the original prices, but some parties who first purchased lots have resold them atsplendid profits, in some cases at double the purchase price. If in so short a ime handsome profits are made, what will be the result when everything is fully devel- oped ? In the few other cities that are favor- ed with a first class cattle market, fortunes have been made by investors in real estate, and the same is certain to follow in South Omaha. 'While the whole city of Omaha will be greatly benefitted by the growth and development of the cattle interest, South Omaha lots will enhance in value more ra- pidly than any other by reason of the prox- imity to the works. T CONPANY, DOCTOR #17 St, Charie i, Wi v Nerv *hysical Weakness fons of Throat, Skin ar 1d Sores and Ulo Dise £xp es Arising from !ndisc tnd which pr James Medical Institute R Chartered by theStateof I1li- nois for the express purpose 0 of givingimmediate relictin also all complicated form: diseases of the Skin and Blood promptly relievedand permanentlycired by reme- 3 testedina Forty Years hood, positively ¢ ating. The appropriate remedy sed in each case, Consultations, per- sonal or by letter, sacredly confidential. ed- icines sent by Mail and Express, No marks on package to indicate contents or sender. Address DR.JAMES,No. 204Washington St.,Chicago, lll. st i ——————art 2)) SATE BOO) o infcmakoz, L6, 0., for sor ivaner’ mu veafo Town Lots in Denver Junction, Weld County, Colorado. Denver Junction is a new town of abont 200 nhabitante, laid out in 1884, on the great trunk railway across the continent, at the junction of tho Julesburg Branch, 197 miles from Denver., The town is on eecond bottom land of the Platte River, the finest location between Omaha and Denver, and is eurround- ed by the bost-laying lands west of Kearney Junction, Neb. ; climate healthy and bracing; altitude 8,600 feet, Denver Junction bids to become an important point, as the U, P, R. R. Co., aro putting up manyof their build bere, whilo the B, & M. R, R, Co.. ar . ed 800n to conneck at this plage, The presant chance for good investments in town lots will scarcely evor bo equaled elsewhere, For sals by the lot or block in good terms by H. M. WOOLMAN, Agent, Denver Junction Colo GONSUMPTION; T havo positivo romody for tho abovo dlsons ns0 thousan. ind MANUFACTURERS. Manufacturers of all kinds will find itto their advantage to inspect this property; good location, level grounds, track facilities and plenty of good pure water furnished by the South Omaha Water Works, In fact, every facility to make desirable for manufacturers, including cheap ground. BUSINESS MEN ‘Will find it profitable to select proparty now, as a year or two hence with a population of 5000 to 10,000 people, PENNYROVAL PILLS “CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH." p Original and Only Ge ullul'. At Drugglsts. Trade eupplicd by J. A, Fuller & Co unel? Manhood Restored MEDY FREE~A victim of youthful imprudence Nervous Debility, Lost in vain every known eausing Premature Deca; Manhood, &e., having tri o wl sond S I Lo a o pulfarora: this will become a desirable place for all kinds of business, Addreas. J HLBEBVIR QO ~em SiDiew and lots bought now, can be had at very reasonable prices which will double in price many times in the next two vears. EVERYBODY, Rich or poor, will find it profitable to make investments in this property. Kree conveyance at all times will be fur-- nished by us to parties wishing to see this wonderful new NERVOUS DEBILIT Prematurc Deoline from LontBawes disenses of the A Fostato Glan, ey and Brontato Glun NE MUSIC HOUSE armmmen | UINDERTAKERS | town and learn of its advantages, We have entire charge of, and are the exclusive agents for the sale of all this property from G streets south, Splendid lots from $225 upwards, BEDFORD & SOUER 213 8. [4th STREET, We have desirable business and residence property for sale in all parts of Omaha and do a general real estate business, = We solicit by~ ers and sellers to call on us. We will give them!all possible information free, and keep conveyance free to show property in any part of the city, Bedford & Souer, AFINE LINE OF Pians & g WOODBRIDGE BROS, THE ONLY EXOLURIVE IN OMAHA NEE. (SUCCESSORS YO JOEHN @, JAUORE) At the old stand 1417 Feroam 8i. Crders by bele fragh solicied aod prowpll aiiended b Telcy Som o 424, A BEAUTIFUL TOWN. D ——

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