Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 4, 1885, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

V BITTERS Combining IRON with PURE VEGETABLE N the action of the Liver and Kidneys, Clears the complexion, makoes the skin smooth. It does not Injure the teeth, eause headache, or produce con- stipation—ALL OTH N MEDICINES DO. Physicians and Druggists everywhere recommend it. s P DR N, 8. RoaoLes, of ) recommend Brown's Iron Bitte for omriching the blood.and rr symptoms, It does not hurt th n, Mass, says: "1 Raltibio fonio " Al dyspept Reynolds, Ind., sags: “1 fron. Bltters In. cases of 8,2 St New Orleans, L., Tron Hitgars reiloved mo ina cass oning, and, 1 hoartily commend it to purifior. " Tho Genuine hias Trade Mark and erossed rod linos on wrapper. Take no other, Mado only by BROWN CHEMIOAL, 00, BALTIMORE, M. LADIES' HAND BoOK—usaful and attractivo, con- taininig list of prizos for rocipos, information about coins, eto,, given away by all dealers in medi ‘mailed to aay addross on roceipt of S, stamp, fealspuid 42 foe RROAD CLADY, . wngtae 9 EEY BEST OPERATING RTICKEST SELLIN WERT PERTEGT CORTNG S10V ey aftered (o the gublic s [about |3 Works. 4 186 South 4 0:5: 15 CONDUOTED BY Royal Havana Lottery | (A GOVERNMENT INSTITUTION.) DOrawn at Havana Cuba, Every 10 to 14 Days. Tickets in Fifths; w) For the benefit of sufforicg humanity, I deem it only my duy to give thisuntolicited testimony and tho 0ld timo treatment healed up, but it had only been driven into the rystem by ths use of p-tash and mercury, and in March, 188, it broke out in my throat, and concentrated into'what eome of the doc- tors called oanoer, eating through my cheek, stroying the rcof cf my mouth and upper lip, then attacked my tongue, palate and lower lip, “estroy- ing the palato aud under lip ontirely and baif my tongue, eating out to the top of my lefs cheek bone and up'to tholeft eye. 1 could not cat auy solld tood, but subsisted on I'quide, avd _my tongue was 50 far gono I cou d not talk Suchwas my wretched helpless condition the tirst of last October, 1834, when my friends commenced giving me Swift's Spo: olfio, TnJeus than & month tho eating piaces stoppod and healing commenced, and he fearful aparture in my chcok has been closo and firmly knitted to- gether, A process of & new under lip is_progressing fincly, aud the tonguo which was almost destroyed 18 being recovered, and 6 scoms that naturo is sup- 3lying a new togue, 1 can talk 8o that my friends can readily undertand me, and can slso eat solid focd gale. If any doubt these facts, I would refor thed to Hon, John H. Traylor, state senator of thls district, and to Dr. T B, Bradfleld of LaGrango Ga. JOHN F. BRADLRY, 44 Griswoldst. Dotrolt, Mich., May 16, 15¢5, For sal6 by all druggists. THE SWIFT SPECIFIO CO, N. Y, 157 W. 284 8t. Drawer 8, Atlanta, Ga. ICE, £ I i N Debility, 1 ay, Norvous Debility, Lost din every known s of solf-cure, lefir-hl‘gfu‘fl. Imported Beer IN BOTTLES, Aihiood, o e Liiraae SR ESTIC, Aubauser ..., . | 8t. Louls Schlitz-P Laner.Milwaukee maha | Ale, Porter, Domestioand Khino Wines ED MAURER, 1218 Farnam 8t, 1 wi) Al corrasy REMEDY 00, o DR. H. e Tain wredr MEW VABK. OMAHA SAVINGS BANK | Cor. 13th and Douglas Sta, Capital Stock, $160,000 Liability of Stockholders, 300,000 Five Per Cent Intergst Paid op Deposits LOANS MADE ON REAL ESTAZ.. OfMosrs o Directors JAMES E. BOYD. +President Managlog Director *. Cashier | SUPERSTITIOUS SPORTS. Gamblers and Therr Tdcas Abont Luck and 10 Luck, Bome Idiosyncrasies of Supersti tion—The Gospel of Fortune. “You are at llberty to believe itor not,” remarked a well known sporting man to a reporter yestcr’ay “‘but there ls no class of people so addleted to super- atition as the gambling fraternity, You may belleve it or you may not, but let me tell you there Is a great deal In this, There are very few gamblers in Omaka who do not have thelr private superstit- {ons on the questions of luck, and govern themeelves accordingly, The gamblers’ vocatlon i so uncertain, and his methods are 8o thoroughly Independent of any fixed laws, that saperstition fastens enslly upon him. Somet!imes it ocan be notlced in one way, and sometimes in another; occasionally it will have a firm hold upon him, and will control his every act, while again he may be Inclined to repudlate almost altogether the gospel of luck, ““Why, see here,” continued the sport, ‘“‘there goes a man across the street who s recognized by evergbody as a ‘high roller, He plays for blg stakes, and is always very successful; and yet he is the most superstitions man In existence, I believe. One of his greatest fancles s that It is always fatal to his luck to play on the oleventh day of the mohth, Why? I understand that one night, the 11th day of Aprll, Ithink it was, some time within the past ten or twelve years, he dropped several thousand dollars in a heavy game of poker. Since that time he has noted the fact that on the eleventh of the month he is fated to lose. Con- sequence Is he never plays on that day. *‘I know gamblers,” said the speaker, ‘“who will never play if they meet the same person twice when golng from one place to another, say from thetr locgings to meals. They think 1t Is a sure omen of {llluck tobecompelled to speak to the same person twice withln five or ten minutes. There are other men who will always refuse to play when certain persons ave in the room. They have an ides, don’t you know, that these persons ‘hoodoo’ them. What does ‘hoodoo’ mean? To exerclse an evll or inansplclous Influence upon one's playlng, to destroy his luck, is to hoodco him, No, I don't exactly know the derivatlon of the term. I'm not much of a scholar, you know. Be- lieve 1t comes from some Hindco word, meaning an evil spirlt—the origln of its use Is probably linked with that of the negro superstition of the ‘“‘voodoo.” *‘Yes, I conld talk to you for hours gamblera’ litile snperstitions, There are players who If you touch one of their chips, or put one of yours atop of thelrs, will curse you up hill and down dale for playing the *hoodoo’ on them. A great many sporling men think it’s sure death to a night's luck to plck up or even seea crooked pin In the street. I have read somewhera that old Thad. Stevene, who was a great poker player, would always plck up a pin with ¥ | the point toward him so as to Insure good luck. “One of the most common su- peratitions is that which leads a man to belleve In lucky seats. Most poker players do that, and so ¢o|000; Vi & great many laro-bavk players. Another great thing to bring a man luck, so think | 38 many, Is a four-leafed clover. I have met doring my life time a good many sporting men who placed the utmost re- liance upon some charm or finger ring which they always wore, 1f they should lose the charm they would firmly belleve that they had loat thelr lack, for atime, anyway. ‘“‘Another stranger superstition enter- tained by some gamblers,” he continued, “‘Is that If they can dream the same thing o | two nights In succession it issure to bring them good luck, A great many men al- ways bet on the numbers which figure pecullarly or figure in any way in thelr dreams. “‘Another phase of superstition with sporting men,” contlnued the gambler, “‘is that connecting luck with animals or thelr actions, What do I mean? Let me explain to you, 1 went home one day and found a dog with a broken leg in front of my house. I took it in-doors fed 1t and had the legset, The next day I wentdown town and made one of the biggest winnings in my life, The dog has got well acd still remalns with me, Of course, 1 still have my ‘off days,’ but then you know you can’t help that. 1t 18 no uncommon thing for sports to ses a mouss run out every day and play around their chair and they become so wedded to the idea of playlng when the mouse is around that days when it don’t show up, thelr luck is broken. = Positive fact that one of my old pals refused to touch the cards for seven days after a luck-bringing mouse of his had dled. He use to inslst that that mouse had earned him more luck than any other charm he ever had. Some sports are Inclined to believe that change of clothes will bring a change of luck, I have known a man to sit down and lose to the tume of thousands of dollars, then go home and change every | rag of clothing he had on, come back and carry off the heaviest kind of stakes, Well, you see, there's slmoet an endless varlety of superstitious Idess entertalned by gamblers, and might go on all day and tell you about them, Each man, if he be at all under the control of superstition, has his own Individual ‘‘charm’—hls own pecullar idea of luck, No two men, I'll venture to affirm, are exaotly allke on thess polnts,” “‘I suppoze there are a great many ups and downs of luck in the game,” ventured the scribe, *Right you are, There will be some days when a man can't play, to save him, The next day he will ““strike the bank " about right, and work 1t for a big plle. Many a time 1've come down town with 206 or 60 cents In my pocket and gone home with $200 or $300, or more. The next dsy fortune would frown on me, acd I would turn around and loee every cent of my previous day's winnings. Yes, sir, you can talk all you please, but you can't ;mll:B"me lore my falth in the gospel of uck, rying, There are seven seperate and distinct which the nuptlal knot may be s The Milwaukee Journal, the at- tendlng expente of the different moudes varylng from §1 to $1,000. The least ex- pensive and the one seldom adopted, ex- cept in cases of elopement, Is that afford. ea by the justice’s office. There a couple can be firmly unlted in the space of a minute for a emall sum, 1t Is customary for a groom to dress as he may please when the marriage Is to be performed by justice, and a dress sult would be radly out of place in the musty law office. The one grest advantuge of the justice-shop marrlage 1s ita cheapness, As some peopls object to belng marrled THE DAILY BEE---SATURDAY, JULY 4, 1885. by a justlce of the peace, preferring the ranction of the church in additlon to that of the law, the youog paople may visit a parsonage instead of a justice's office with the same preparation. The ceremony may be fally as informal when performed at the minlster's home, the only differ- ence being that not less than §3, and better still 85, or $10, should be paid for the service, althoogh there is no fixed sum obarged. The most popular cere- mony among people who do not claes themselves as In ‘‘scclety,’ and aleo among raany who do, is a qulet home wedding, where the bride is attired in a sult of plaln white or a travellng dress, and the groom In & plain black or brown business sult, and where only a few friends and relatives are present. The affalr If Informal, perhaps a modest supper or lanch belng served after the cetemony I8 performed, and the entire expense to the groom being covered by a $20 blll, or even less. Thisis the moat popular wedding ceremoany, and this s the way In which fully 75 per cent, of young paople are m-nle!. Next In point of favor and Inexpensive- ness s the Informal church wedding. be- Ing similar In all things except that the service Is performed within the portals of the church. If the affalr is striotly prl- vate, the brlde and groom may bes untup- ported, or have bri¢cymaids and grooms- men, as they please, In the latter case full dress sults should be worn, Increasing the expense, The *‘full-dress wedding,” as 1t may be called when the ceremony {s performed at home, Is vext In favor. Elaborate trousseau, fall-drets sults, brldermalds and groomsmen, flowersin abundance, and a host of invited guests are the requisites, foillowed by a recep- tion, feast, or lunch as the contracting parties may desire. The seventh, and last, and most popu- lar is the full-aress affafr performed In church, Among people who desire to croate a stir In soclety this is the favorite. It is expeasive, and in many cases unsat- 1sfactory. EDUCATIONAL, It is said that the average aga of students entering western colleges is htgher than it formerly was, Prof, John Tyndall, of London, has given £10,700 to Columbia college as a foundation for a fellowship in Physics, Miss Brown, of Concord, Mass., a graduato of the Harvard Annex this year, has aston. ished the faculty by her hich grade in the classics, Her average is higher than that reached by any of the young men in college, At the recent commencement of the uni- versity of Mississippi Miss Victoria Hill took the valedictory and won the first medal in a large claes of competitors, The university was only opened to women three yoars ago. Lieut, M, I, Cooly, who has been at Ann Arbor several yoars under government ap. pointment, has resigned from the United States navy and accepted the professorship of mechanical engineerine in the Michigan uni- versity.. Mr. Masataka Yamanakaof Japan, for six years a student of Franklin and Marshall college, at Lancaster, Pa, (a college belonging to the Reformed church), graduated last week and was immediately engaged by the Japan- ese legation in Washington City, D. O,, as secretary, The University of Borlin is attended by 1,465 matriculated students, besides 1,205 un- matriculated ‘‘hearers.” The philosophic fac- ulty embraces 1,856 students, the medical 1,072, the junstic 937, and the theolozical 600, Great Britain contributes 11 and America 89 to the total. Fiftoen states in the union contain univer- sity and college property to the value of § 000,000 or over, Th rank as follow: Pennsylvania, Missouri, 7; California, ,000; Tennessee, S1, 409,630; Michigan, S1 '8,000; Rhode Island, $1,- 250,000; District of Columbia, 81,200,000, dians, $1,120,000, The state having ¢ s Delaware, which has but $30,000 investod in schools of a high grade, TIn his address to the students of the Wor- ceater Free institute recently, Gov, Robinson said that the teachivg of handicraft should Segin at home, Boys should learn girls’ “work.” *I thank my mother,” said he, ““that she taught me both to sew and to knit. | % Although my domestic life has always been felicitous, I have at timea found this knowl- edgo very convenient. man who knows how to do these things, at all times honorable and sometimes absolutely necessary to pre- serve one's integrity, is ten times more pa- tient when calamity befalls than one who Ihlu not these accomplishments,” ‘We are gratified to note the fact that the public echools ¢f Alabama are mixing fome industry with sciepce and literature, some vhysical training with intellectual culture, Tn fomalo colleges young ladies receive value: able instruction 1 the art and handiwork of housewifery; and in the schoolrooms young men are taught that labor, whether of head or of hand, of brain or of mucle, is always dignified, manly and honorable, It will be a proud day of promise for Alabama when every public school within her boundaries shall establish an industrial department.— [Selma (Ala.) Times, e —— Horsford’s Acld Phosphate, AS AN APPETIZER, Dr. Morris Gisps, Howard Cily, Mich., says: *‘I am greatly plessed with 1t a3 a tonle; it is an agreeable and good appetizer,” e —— e " Saveral live epecimens of a queer little Ans- traiian animal -upon which the formidable name *‘ornithorynchus” has been inflicted — have been brought to this country by Dr, H. A, Ward, It is claimod that this cresture forms a perfect connecting link between birds and mammal It looks like the beaver, buc instead of having balr on ite back it has scales, and in place of ecales on ita tail it has hair; while long investigation has shown thatit lays an egg like a bird, but suckles its young like a mammal, e —— ““That tired feellng” from which you suffer 0 much, particnlarly in the morn. Ing, is entirely thrown off by Hood's 1| earsaparilla, . —— At o parish church in Surrey, England, the other dry, a widower of elghty-four was mar- ried to & widow of eighty seven, The bride- room was attended by, 8 grandson and the flide by & couple of great-granddaughters. e e——— Pile Tumors however large, speedily and painlessly oured without knife, caustic, powder or ointment. Consultatlon free, Write for pamphlet and references, enclosing two letter stamps for mpl{. World’s Dls- pensary Medlcal Assoclation, (63 Maln Street, Buffalo, N. Y. In Cape Colony. South Africa, thero are pow 176 postal savings banks, which have a $olal of 27.461 depositors, with balances due them of $934,180, The bystem hes been in operation there only eighteen months, —— But few articles have reached such v world wide roputation as Angostura Bitters, ¥or over b0 years that they have been the ac- knowladged standard reculators of the di- Restive organs, tatore. Be manufactured only by Dr. J. Sons. Don't drink cider through » lead pipe. Half & dozen men in & Massachusetts town took their cider frow a barrel 1n this manner and are now suffering from lead poisoning, o —— If you feel nervous as to your kidneys, liver or urlpary crgsns, use Hubt's Remedy. Many & man who had lcst nerve, vigor and evergy, has been cured by Hunt's Remedy, Joshua Tuthill, Saglnaw, Mich,, had Bright's Disesse, and was cured by Hunt's Remedy. She's & Daisy, She has & roguish eye, And a mouth for custard-pio, Bat she's the loveliost girl I've ever soon; She wears & pig-tail curl, And is & modest girl, For she only eats a gallon of ico-cream ! ~[Newman Independent, ——— Hammock Song, Now the hammock swingeth, wingeth in the breezs, Jike a filmy cob-web "Twixt the trees, Ha! the thing collapseth, Collapseth with a snap, And the one within it Takes a dra) ~[Oincinnati Merchant Travellor, e —— The Inside R. J, BURDETTE, Ho came to the bower of her T love Twanging his sweet guitar; He called her in song his snow-white dove, His lily, his fair, bright star, While I &at close by the brown eyed maid And helped her enjoy her serenade. Ho sang that his love was beyond compare (Hin voico was sweot aa his song); He said she waa puro and gentle and fair, And I told her he wasn't far wrong. T don’t know whether ho heard me or not, For his E string snapped like a pistol shot, He told how he loved her o’er and o'er, With passion in every word, In songs that I never knew before, And sweoter ones ne'er were heard,’ But the night dews loosened his guitar strings And they buzzed out of tuns like crazy things, Ho sang and ho played til the moon waa higgh, Oh, sweet was the love-born strain; And the night cavght up each tremulous sigh And echoed each sweet rofrain: : But Llaughed when o beetis flaw down bis throat, And choked in n snort his highest note, She liked it, and T did—just so-s0; T was glad to hear his lay; I even echoed him, soft and low. When he sang what I wanted to eay, Till at Inst T leaned from the window, and then I thanked him, and atked him to call again: And then he went away. " —[From the Brooklyn Eagle, .fifi )TAR 7 ont\\.,:.,/\mmc CeTAR oucH@uRE Absolutely Free from Opiates, Emetics and Poisons. A PROMPT, SAFE, SURE CURE For Coughn, Sore Thront, Honrscness, Influcnzey Colda. Bronchitia, Cronp, Whoo Coughy Asth n € 2 their o7 to prom; 1100 botiles, Ezpress charges 0 0 r to TARLES A, VOGELER COMPANT, ole Uwniers and Manufu Baltimore, £ ( 5 DOCTOR WHITTIER Vou 1o, Dabillty, hysical Weakncss ; Mercurial and o ions of Throat, Skin or Sanes, Bland Po 5 1 | A Radical Ohauge in Women's Dress, Boston Herald, I think that venerabls and highly re- epected artlels of fomale dress, the che- mise, may advantageously be wholly dis- pensed with, Every one is supposed to have a chemise *'to her back,” but that this supposition is not wholly true was proved to me some time sgo. Wheo at the seaside last autumn two girls, matual frlends of mine, and whom I introduced to each other, went one warm day with me to bathe. Ono sald to the other: “I am afraid you will be awfully ehocked when you see me undress.” ‘“Shocked! Why?" “Well, I hardly like to tell ycu; but the fact s, that 1 have eo little on.,” I don’t wear much,” sald the other. ¢‘All I have s combinationr, stays and ore pettlcoat under my drees,” Curlously enough, both thene girls were dressed In preclsely the same wey, in woolen combinations, stays (well shaped and not tight), one petticoat and a dress, which, from its el- egance, gave no susplclon of the state of affairs underneath. As I had an oppor- tunity of observing, there young ladies were dressed in perfectly sanitary style, although none but myself had any idea of the fact; and, In spite of it, they passed for two of the best dreszed girls at the fashionable watering place where we wero staying. I have since had saveral opportanities of cbservatlon, and I find that quite a number of the best dressed women of my acqualntance have renounced the use of chemise In favor of woven combl- nations, The majority, however, I be- ileve, are not Induced to do o by eani- tary consideratlons, but slmply because the chemise is a bulky article and makes them look stouter than ls natural to them; wherenas, the cumbinations befng made In a stretchy materlal, fit somewhat closely and show the symmetry of the figure. ——e—— " YOUNG MEN:—READ THIS. = Tik Vorraio Beur Co,, of Marshall, Mich offer to send their celobrated ELECTRO-VOL- TAIC BELT and other ELECTRIO APPL! ES on trial for thirty days, to men (young or old) afflicted with nervous debility, loss of vitality and manhood, and all kindred troubles, Al for rheumatism, neuralgia, paralysis, and many other diseases, Complete restoration to health, vigor and mavhood guaranteed. No risk is_incurred, as thirty daya’ trial is allowed, Write them at once for illustrated pamphlet free, i Club Manners and Military Training, It s always amusing, smiles the gossip of the Brooklyn Eagle, to note the young man who has just been elected a member of a good club and who starts In asa regular club man, Take him at an {m- mature age and confer upon him the dig- nity of a club member, and he elther be- comes a loud boor or the mest proper and reserved of men, As a raie he picks ont some time worn aad blate club man for a model and apes him in everything, Ho aesumes a stolid and Indifferent alr, sits as his modol eits, cats as his model eats, and emokes the same brand of clgers that his model affects, He is elow, lan- guld, but not lazy, and Lis attire {s of the moet fashionable cut. Ancther sort of club member s the one who mskes up hls mind to feel per- fectly at home at all hszards, He cul- tlvates an easy and careless sir. He learns the Chrlstlan names of all the members, jokes with the porters, sprawls over two or three chairs in the smoking- room, ccuverse at the top of their lungs at dinoer, and has his club printed on his viciting-card more prominently than his own name. The effect of club life on young men of all dispositions {s good, how- ever. The rough edges are soon worn off by the sharp comments of the older club men, and a raw youngster is turned into a polished man in less time at a good club than anywhere else on earth, except at West Poiot. It has always astonished me to observe the eflect of military train- ing upon the boys who go up the river to learn to besoldiers, The uncouth, clumsy, aud stumbling louts who enter the first class are turned cut models of deport: ment at the end of the term, of whom even a Turyeydrop might be proud, L —— Mysterious Disappearance, Last week & well-known merchant was missed, and has not sioce been heard from. The mystery shrouds his frlends in snxlety and gloom. But If your dys- pepsia, your rheumatism or your liver complaint hsppens to dlsappear myster- fously, you are happy. To make them disappear use Brown's Iron Bltters, the prince of tonics, which you can buy at any drog stere for one dollar, e e— Strawberries on which paris green had been blown from a neighboring potato fiela, have occasioned eeveral cases of serious illness in and near Kaston, Pa., withiu a weelk past, e —— When Baby was sick, wo gave her Castoria, ‘When she was a Child, she cried for Castoris, When she became Miss, she clang to Castoria, Wheu sho hiad Childres, she gave thom Castoria buta tateof 11li- purpose ate relietin in_and dand yreme- orty Years opriate remedy nsultations, per- sonal or by letter, sacredly confidential. Med- icines sent by Mail and Express, No marks on package to indicate contents or sender, Address HBOULY TRUB o IRON TL.OOSE’S HXTRACT Red Cloyer Blossom TS Cancexrs.: ' Irnaca, Mich., Fe e BoR and ChT dor ORrer M and am well. 1am satisflod it is the best remedy Caneer known. You aro welcome to use this for enefit of eutfering humanity, Kespect ¥y MRS, L. A, JOHNSOX. ' Scrofula. ToLxpo, 0., January 17, J‘H.'lm“n({‘o..)ln!non?mm 0 Innuary 31y i i - i’\llll! has for some time been afflicted S i e Clevra o] s SATS el ATy ettt ‘amonm 0 use for their benefit, Ve i e 1 b VoY ToSpCCituly, I ARME, Erysipelas. o100, 0., 1, 1682 2.3, Looss & Co. Moxuow, e, Ot DO 1 T commibuced talking your Bxt. Ted Clover, Yoars ‘airo, for Lrysipeiasn and have Hov bocd bloa since. 16 13 horediiary with me. Think you the pest bl medi e ours cruly, "W, M. SEIDERT. Elover SHoros. R. . flyman, of Grand s, Mich.. says—After 6 Doctors advised him & ¥t Ked Clover gor a bad case of Fezem ore’on tho Teg. iy used two pounds ot ydirSolid kixtruct iied Cloves m now we Asa Spring Medieluo Tonlo and general Blood Purk 1t hu no equal. For salo by NGLISH." in E PARE At Drugglste. Trade eupplicd by J. A, Fuller & Co unel? 0. ¥, Davis, T, A, CrriGH, Nebraska Land Agency, 0. F. DAVIS & GO., OGENEBAL DEALEDS IN Real Estate And Real Estate Mortgages 1605 FARNAM STREET, - . OMAHA, Have for sale 200,000 acres carefully selected lands Tow price and on easy terat Improved farms for gale n Douglas, Dodge, Collaz, Platte, Burt, Quming, Barpy, Washingion, Merrick, 8aunders, and Butler countlee, Taxes paid in all parts of the state, Notary Publlo aiways la oftos. Correspondence gollcied Mooy losved on tmproved farms and city proper. — Or. Amelia Bumoughs OFFICE AND RESIDENCE, 617 Dodge St., Omaha TRLEPHONR KO, 144 M. R. RISDOR, Gom Insurance Ageul The Merchants of Nowark,N. J., Assels Glrard Fire, Philadelphta, Assets ... New Hampshiro, Cash As6ot o1, weme = o 1LO150X o O v 15" Madlaon Square, Ph A BEAUTIFUL TOWN ELEGANTLY LOCATED. Large Lots at Reason- able Prices. A Good Investment South Omaha, Since the 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. ‘Several 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- ployment 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 have made no change from the original prices, but some parties who first purchased lots have resold them at splendid 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. MANUFACTURERS. Manufacturers of all kinds w'll find it to their advantaga to inspect this property; good location, level grouunds, 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 581)0 to 10,000 people, this will become a desirable place for all kinds of business, 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 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 streetssouth, Splendid lots from $225 upwards. BEDFORD & SOUER 203 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 bry=~ ers and sellers to call on us. We will give themfJall possible information free, and keep conveyance free to show property in any part of the city, Bedford & Souer,

Other pages from this issue: