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THE DAILY BEE--SATURDAY, JULY 18, 1885. | SociaL REFORM IN INDIA, BEST TONIC. This medicine, combining Iron with Yegetablo Cures Dysp ra Bl nnd Nearaly Itis an unfailing r Liver. for pun et Tdiicestion, Wenlmess, A, Mdarin, Chillyand Fevers, cdy for T rifies the & ul 14" the nssimilation of food, re- rn and Belching, and strengthe cles and nerve tent Fevers, Lassitude, Lack of it has no equal &9~ The genvine bas above trade mark and erossed red lincs on wrapper, Take no other. Tate only by BEOWS CILFHICAL €000 BALTINORE, 008 AXRNNNY i: BRORD GLAIY . L0 BEST OPERATING AUICKEST SELLING AND " ARFRCT COURIAG STO7E e Lo e pubin 0 T34 eA LRI ; (o} CONDUCTED BY Eoyal Havana Lottery i (A GOVERNMENT INSTITUTION.) Drawn at Havana Cuba, Every 10 to 14 Days. Tickets in Fitths; wholos §5; Fractions pro rata, Bupjece 10 1o mmimmu..., oy coatrolied by the parbicaln {nsorcad. I\ [s (ho falvosh thing in the ®ature of chance In existence. For tlokots appiy 40 SHIPSEY & CO., 1912 Broad way,K. Y. City;, or M.OTTENS & CO, 61 Maln 8%, Kannsé Otiy, Mo, Frightful Case of a Colored Man, . Teontracted a fearful caze of blood poison in 1833 was treated by gomo of the best physicians in At- 1antu, They used the old romedics of morcary and potash, which hiovght oa rheumat ed my digestive orgons. Every join swollen and {ull of pain. When 1 was given up to die my physiclans thought it would bo_a oud time to tost the virtucs of Swift's Specific,. When I com- monced taking 8. 8. 8., the physician sald [ could Dot live two weeks under the ordinary treatmer t. Ho commenced to give mo the midicing strictly so. condng to directions, which I contiouel for scveral months. Tto k nothiog eise and continued to. im- rave teom tho very first oon ‘the rheumatism ot me, my appotito right, and tho ulosrs hich the doctor said wero tho most frightful he had over seen, begaa to heal, and by the lat of O tober, 1884, 1 wa & well gain. | am strop now thsu [ evor wasbefore, and weigh more. 8. 8 hias eaved we from an early grave. Lest McCLESDON, the omploy of the wears, and I know o true. At the timo ho Speeille ho was in a horibic con- 1 regard his cure almost miraculyus. B. Crosny, Manager, Chess-Carley Co., Atlauti Division, ta, Ga., April 16th, 1385, lo” by all arugglsts, « ases mailed froo. ., Drawer 3, Atlanta, One special fentuze of Ridge's Food, in contradis- thnoticn to others, 15 its noutral action upon the Dovels. For this reason 1t 1y spoctally a ipted to thewa asons when bovel troubloa are ko frequ nf. Hoamember Ridge's food is an old and tried prepara tlon for five years In England and Amerios, = 1t s & perfectly sato and nounshing diot for all ¢onditions, PENNYROYAL PILLS "CHICI-:ESTER'S ENGLISH." i) ERVOUS Al Tirion Contgeatian TON KEMEDY G0.. or Dit. H. TRESKOW. e st aen mersar MEW VAR Notice! Notrce! Notic THE MAGNETIC HEALER, To all who are diseased or afl Jong the standing; come and Lo he Feamale dis- eas0s wii o medicines bave falled to give relief, a sproial i came oue, come all and be healed by the Maguebic caler, the ouly sure eecape {om auy dis. ease. I roxamloation, our cha'ges are §L. for each Sreadmert or visitations #2; terws striotly cash. J H. PAGELAR, North Stats 8t., ove milo wost of Falr Grounds Omaha, Neb. P.'0, Box 633, Its Advancement Under Many Trying Diffnl'ics. Treatment of Women—Abolition of The Sattee—Some of the Means Taken to Overcome Oseto Prejudices, New Orleans Times-Democrat. English papers which come to us with reveral columus of extracts from the Indis press tell us a very remarkable so- olal advance effected under British rule in Hindoatan. This s especially notice- able In regard to the condition of woman in India to-day compared with ber situa- tlon at the beginning of the century. It was only fn 1831 that the prastice of burning widows was abolished by the government; and up to that time, as Max Muller observer, ‘“‘women were burnt wholesale, even In the Immediate nelghborhood of Calcutta,” Daring 1823, in tho Bengal presidency alone wldows were burnt; In the very limits of the Calcutta court of circait 310 were burnt. Numbers of these were beanti- ful young glels under twenty; and yet the first cffort to secure the abolltion of the hideous cuastom was made, not by a Europesn, but by an enlighteaed Hindoo, Rammohun Roy. He held, with good reascn, that the practice of suttee was not ordalned by the great teachers of Hindoo religlon, and not jae- tified by the ancient Sanscrit texts, In the controversies which he provoked, he {nvarlably came out conqu rer; but con- trovessy alone cannot suflico to extera!- nate a national carse, or to uproot an an- cicut superstition. Therefore it was that he ustablished, about 1818, the ‘‘Soclety of Beliovers in the Supreme,” or Brahma. Somak. Tmmediately the orthodox Brah minlcal party founded an opposltion so- cloty, called the “Soclety of the Law,” or Dharma-Somaj; snd this society at once petitioned the English government sgainst the abolition of suttee, THE SUTTEE, One would have thought thateuch a question could not have been long dis- cussed in vain before enllghtened Eng- llsh rulers—that the cause of humanity would only have had to plead once ia order to trlumph. But euch was not the case. Goveruments act upon pelicy; and the abolitlon of suttee involved some social problems of the graveet character. It was only in 1831, when Rammohun Roy himeelf went to London, that the govornment finally rejected the prayers of the orthodox patty, and decided to abolish the abomtnable and monstrous custom ¢f burning women allve, Tne naw decree did not, however, do 80 much for women in India as had been expected. While the practice of widow- burning was indeed put an end to, the unfortunate yourg woman wlho lcst her husband was not protected agatnst the cruelties of prejudice and euperstition. Her very existence was consldered an iu- i | decout fact; she was univereally treated with contempt, deprived of whatever property she posssssed, condemned to perform menial labor, and often driven to commit safcide. Gradu:lly this state of affair was ameliorated; buv the idea of a widow remarrylng was coneidered shocking in the extreme. The next re- form to haattempted was to make a sec- ond marriage popular; and a new society was founded for that purpose which has already accomplished much good. STRANGE ADVERIISEMENTS, It publishes a perlodical devoted to Its object; and thls paper, entltled the So- clal Reformer, is fall of matrimonial ad- vertlsements of & very sincerc and decor- ous descrlption. We clto some exampels: A Winow or A DB LI, BRAHVIN CASTE, 13 yeara of age, lost her husband six months aftor marriage, Hler father wishes to give her in marriage to a Bengal Brahmin of high clan, A BENGALT LADY, OF BRAHMIN CASTE, WHO became a widow w! sho was 11 yeurs of age, and who possesses . fair complexion and long, beautiful hair, and whose moral charac- ter is most unexceptioaable, is prepared to marry a gentleman of herown caste accord. ing to orthodox ritos, 2 ARDIANS OF KHARTI (Caste) Lan of Kapur clan, aged seventeen, who 13 the ecion of @ highly respectable family, and is receiving education in English and Persian, are willing to encourago the system of widow fage by warryiog him with & widow of e caste, 1EQUIRED, A MatcH rorR A B widow of the Vsidya caste, aged fourteen who had been married at her eleventh and lost her busbano at her thirteenth, She is of v complexion, of ood features, and can read and write Beogali tolerably well, knows the alphabat of Enghsh. and is very intelli gent; cau knit comforters, stockings, etc, pretty well, and 18 very willing to wor The “candidato must be a membar of the Naidya caste, and of respactabile family, e must be well ed d of good moral ipvearen Winow, 13 1o 15 ould be of zood ¢hape, fea- on, tamper and health, and not ny hereditary diseaso, daugh ollgo-do gentloman, and of ' respec- > casto for an onlightencd young Dengal Zewindar (landlord) of respectable caste snd family, accompliched, well bult, aud froe from every present and idiop nalady; he is prepared to meet agreeable demands, and in order to encouraga widow m © among the nobles and genties. he is desirous of pre senting the bride at the wedding with jewels worth 10,000 rupees, Ia Eogland or Amerlea this sort of ad- vortising s generally deemed either far- cical or worse; but i Indfa it fs not so; and accomplishes much good for reform, L S HONEY FOR THE LADIES, Beige dresses are trimmed with velvet of a darker shade. ®ligured India tilks have plain bodices with lace jabots. Thero is nothing so foarfully naked, s lean beauty unadorned, Wool canvas, with is used for mantles, Foulard and India silk are trimmed with bands of white guipure, Black lace over white net is used for flounc ing colored silk dresses, Yak lace skirts "in neutral tono are em- broidered with tlogs silk, Suede and Saxn gloves are tho popular styles and are in sofi'tones, The fashionable contrast of moss-green and biscuit-color is very charming. Thin woollen dreeses have the tucked skirts wads without foundation skirts, White vests are worn with black and brown costumes, with loose jacket fronts, Hand-painted gauze fans are carrisd with sumwer toilettes, The gauzs is black, white or tinted, Gray yak lace interwoven with silver threads is wado up over a foundation of Lie or violet, ‘The bodices of thin materials and sammer silk are gathered or shirred a¢ the peck and waist line, Gold and bead embreidered galloon ° used to trim lace dresses, as well ’L.\' l.hm:u“:f wool or silk, Broton and Suiss bodices seam to increase 1n popularity and are exceedingly becoming to little girlish figures, it e L Laca jackets are rovived in Paris, not only tho short jaunty shapss in Liton, S panish anid Russian styles but those made of picca lacs, cut with darts aud side forms, the skirts coy shaded velvet stripes ered with double rows of pleated lace with corresponding trimmings about the g and the edwes of the leeves. Tucked bodices have lengthwise tucks, cont fined at the wsist line by a row of stitching #0 that a balt is not neceesary Colored nun'e veil are trimmed with muslin_embroidery in colors to corres pond,'put on with lavish hand, 1t s said that nine women out of ten will step from n street car in_the opposite direc tion from the one in which it is going, White holds the first ravk for summer wear. Morniog dresses are made of white wool somewhat heavier than nun’s ve ] Jerseys with stamped gilt flowers over them have no trimming, Gray are embroidered with iridescent beads of the same shade “‘Pompadour” Jace in ecru is a novelty, It is made of ‘‘pieco” uet, deep enough to form the skirt, It is very effective combined with cardinal satin, Moleveteon is anew fabric, It is of eot. ton, closely woven, It has a velvety surface, and is suid to warh well. Tt is made in colors and black and white checke, The latest style of bustle 13 made of watch spring steel wire, and may be used for a col ander, n rat-trap, a_portabls lightning con. ductor, or a baseball catcher's mask, Pet lambs are to take the place of pug dogs a8 compauions of fashionable young ladies at the wateriog placea this rummer, Like the dudes, they would follow them wherever they went, Veils worn with hats are of tulle. vory long, crossing at the back of the head,whence they ara brought terward and tied uader the left ear. Porteatious omen for the super stitioue! “What eort of an establishment is that across the way?’ “Thoy teach drawing, mueic and dancing.” “A young ladies’ som Vo, n dentisi’s shop,”—[Texas Siftings, What spoils stout women is the stays, which displace the bust, pushiog the bcsom almost up to the neck, and formiog violent carves where there thould be only gently swelling linee, The nawest Parisian paraeols are of rilk of delicate tint, puffed on the inside as a lining. It is placed smoothly on the outside and cov- ered with black laze, through which golden gleams corruscate in the syalight, Black laco skirts are worn over plainly gathered silk petticoats with a watered rib- bon eash of the same color as the silk. Some. times the bodice is of the s covered with Iace, but usually fancy eilk ones are worn, You can't tell the nature of a girl from the way she looks, We knew ons once who looked meeker than two lamba before she was married whojtried to pitch her husband out of a second-etory window a week after,— [Kentucky State Journal, Chamois leather gloves are popular at the seaside. They are useful in wardiog off tan, and durable, as a litdle am- monia water will cleanse them effectively, They must ba washed and dried upon the bauds or they will shrinlk, A New York dentist eays that women who gossip a great deal lose their teeth soomest, We doubtit, The women who lose theic teeth soonest are the ones who leave them lying around in wash_basins, window eills, te.— [Pittsburg Cnronicla-Telegraph, Tho fancy for low- cut shoee, buckled or tied across the instep, promises to be quite as pop ular for streot wosr this summer as they be- came last year. Oxford ties made of patent leather aro in steady demand, and the B exceedingly Seat ric3,” a low-cut shod with uppes of russet or bronze, and the vamps of kid, are considered o very chic etyle with roctety gicls, Small gold and bronze enamel buckles fasten the shoe over the instop, Embroidered failles are brought out in els- gant patterns in pale and neutral shades for summor wear, Embroidered India crapes and musling, thin and sheeny as the lightest sitk tiesues are brocaded with exotics and vines in contrasting or blending colors, which give a most brilliant effect. The ruiling shades for the backgrounds to thoese are absin. the_green, silver, b, and pala paach color, shrimp pink and pale almond. A question that has agitated the “country for years is about to b decided by a court of competent_ jurisdiction. It is the question of how low a low-necked dress may be worn. A New York lady attended a ball and was ex- pelled by the management on the ground that fl!!l’ dress was too low in the neck, and she has brought suit for damages and for vindication, The court will be compelled to decide how low a lady may cut her dress at the neck without being improper. However wicked & man may be, it gives him a chill to eco o dress cut low behind as to show where a porous plaster has been taken off the small of the back, and if he has courage after that to go around in front of the lady, and find that the dress is aven lower in front, he is liable to have fits. The law should protect & man, and it is well that this case has been taken to the New York courts, How many respectablo ladics, who wear low-necked dresses in public places, would consent to appear as witnesses in this case, attired in tte dresses they have worn Iow, and testify that the woman who was re fused admission to the ball did "not cutrage pricty, though ber dress on that occasicn might not be as low as theirs often are! I dresses have to baworn low on account of veatilation, or health, ladies ought t> put screenes in front of them, or a pane of glass, —[Peck’s Sun, e —— PILES!! PILES!! PILES! A sure cure for Blind, Bl g, Itck Jlcerated Piles has been discoverad by De. Williams, (an Iodisn remedy), called Dr, Williaws’ Indian Pile Ointment, A single box has cured the werst chronic 30 years standing, No one veed minutes after applyi ing medici Liotions and inst than good, ’ Irdian ys tho o itching, (particnlarly at night g warwi in bed), acts as a poultic ant relief, and is prepared only for Piles, itching of private parts, and for .~ hivg else, DISEASES CURED Ointment. Cures os Sack Heads or ptious on the face, leaving 2 ekin clear snd beautiful, Also cures itch, Salt Rhume, Sore Nipples, Sore Lips, aud old, Obstinate Ulcers, Sold by druggists, or mailed on receipt of price, 50 cents, At retail by Kuhn & C Becht. At wholesalo by Schroeter & vodman, The first horse railroad was builtia 1526 - — Hosford's Acid Fhosphate A VALUABLE REMEDY FOR GRAVEL, Dr. T. H, Newland, Jr., 8t Louls, Mo., saye: ‘1 have used 1t in diseases of the urlnary organs, such as gravel,and particularly ‘spermatorrhos, with very good resulte, and thik it a very valuablo remedy in those diseasos.” e Lightuing killa 1€0° Frenchmen every year, Lo Angostura Bitters is a househeld word all over tho world, For over 50 years it ha advertisod itself by its merits, 1t /snow ad yortised to warn the pablio agaiast countor feits, The genuine article is manufactured by Dr J. G, B, Sievert & Sous el B2 Gortez conquered Mexico wit 136 = :n, e —— P MEN!-READ THIS," Tie Vorrate Berr Cc Marshall Mich,, offer to send their celebrated ELecTRO-VoL TAIC BELT and othsr ELECTRIO APPLIANCES on trial for thirty days, to men (young or ola) 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 sud mavhood guaranteed No risk is_incurred, as thirty daya’ trial ia allowed. Write them at once for illustrated pawphlet free. U —— Texas has 620 newspapers. o — Senorita Fohstrom, the new Spanich prima donns, recently debuted at Covent Garden, London, in “Lucis,” and created s furore, Isyour back lame? It Is & eolid fact that the only sure cure for dlscases of the Idneys, liver, bladder, {s Hunt's Rem Disordered liver and_kidneys will pro- duco rheuwatism and neuralgle. Al liver and kldney dis:ases are cuted by Huat's Remedy, FAMILY LITIGATION. A Father and Mother Suing to Obv tain Possession ot a Ohild. Yesterday afternoon Judge McCalloch took up a habeas corpus case in which the posseesion of a child is the cause of ‘litigation, The wrlt of habeas corpus was obtained by Mrs. H. Evecaon, of Minne. apolls, yestorday, for the postession of her slx year old child, Edds, who {18 at present In the cars of her father, Andrew Eveson, a resident of Omaha, | The story of Mrs, Evoson ls that she | separated from her hnsband some time ago, he sifpulating In wrlting that she shonld retain custody of the child. It ls sald that sho sent the girl to Minneapclis, piaclng her In a convent school. The father, 1t Is said, becoming anxious to se- cure tho child, went to Minneapolls and borrowlng 1t for the purpose of taking it for a walk, abducted it. 1t Is furthor as- serted by Mrs. Eveson that from that time to this she has been searching for the girl, and but recently eucceoded i tracing it to this city. A aifferent story ls told by the father who says that the agreement was that he should retaln the child. Both of the claimants appeared In court yesterday afternoon, and by con- sont of the attornoy for Mra, Eveson the case was dismiesed, ——t— Get Ready to Picnic, The Sunday school picnic of tho St. Mary's avenue Congregational church will be held at Bellevue park, ton miles below Omaha, on Thuraday, July 234, or on Friday, tho 24th, If Thursday’ bo stormy. A epecial Burlington & Mis. souri train will leave the depot abuut 9 a. m,, will remain at Belevue all day, and will return at 7 p. m. All scholars of the echool under fifteen years of age will be provided by the school with free tickets. Others, whether members of the school or not, will be charged twonty cents for round trip tickets, if under twenty years of age, and forty cents If over twenty. All friends of the school are Invited at these rates, Tickets will be distributed to those entitled to them at the Sunday tcheol sesslon to- morrow, and at the Burllogton & Mis- sourl depot on Thursday. The excursion- ists will go directly from their homes to the depot, reaching thera not later than O o'clock, Children who have not an excort, or €0 not know the way to the depot, may gather at the church lefore quarter past ofght, where they will be taken In charge by teachers. ——— SINGULARITIX A curiokity at Rockferd, Ill, is a young negress with o luxuriant erowth of aubura ringlets. A Tallahasse man cut the tail off his cat last year, and her Jast litter of four kittens have no tails, At Croton Falls, N. Y., a rooster looks after a large brood of chickens as tenderly as a veritable biddy. A snake, four feet three inches long, was fouud a few days ago by a Boston teamster in a buach of bananas which he was hauling., Three young bantam chickens belonging to Charles R. Hambright, of York ., lay eegs that are pure white on one side and a beauti- ful strawberry color on the other. The malt¢se cat belonging to Squire Belle- ville. uf Saverton, Mo., went to the woods and brought in two young wild rabbits that she now treats as well as the rest of her family, Rover i3 a dog belonging to William H, Tuttle of New Haven. After the morning paper, which is delivered at his master’s store, has been read, Rover takes it to Mrs, Tuttle’s mother to read. The sparrows had been too well treated by a farmer near Youngsville, N, Y., for them to forget him, 8o when a big hawk swooped down on a fat hen and carried it to ths top of a neighboring tree the sparrows went for him, They worried it until it released the hen and attempted to fly away, It finally fell back into the poultry yard with both oycs pecked out and so badly hurt that it died, The oldest piece of Egyptian leather in the Britieh museum is the Bremner (1Rnoid) scroll, containivg a portion of the ritual of the dead, Its date 18 about 18(0 B, C,, and the scroll 15 now carefully preserved in a tin case; the leather is g0 powdery that its custogians are almost afraid to touch it. The color is thatof bright and light new osk sole leather, and peifectly clean, This is belieyed to be the oldeet leather in the world, Quite a curiosity isto be seen 1n & gun snop in Janesville, Wis, in the shape of a white swallow, killed up the river a few days ego by Mr, C. W. Robingon, The bird is the only ono of its clor ever seen in that part of tho country, and belongs to t same family as the common black sparrow, being a sort of albino, Itwas found among a large flock of common swallows which have been staying in the samo place for che past woek, In Sumatra there is a very singuler race called the Kubus, who are too shy to mix with the other races of the island, and dwell in therecesses of the forests. They are looked on us inferiors by the Malays, and thought to be little better than b They live on akes, grubs, fruits, and the flesh of any deor 5 thoy can slay, They are skillful spe; they thropoid apes, o leather is a novlity a8 y V) ad iu the manufacture been largely used, however,in the man- of shoo strings, owing to its greav strength and pliability, It has a loog, tena clous fiber, and as it will uot crack nor tear,it makes an excellent leathe 'hen made up into shoes it greatly resembles French kid, It wears like iron, and would bs suitable for boys’ shoes, Itis entirely water-procf and very cooling to the feet, ma for summer wear, The gkins cut from five to 8ix pairs of men’s vamwps. The leather is hem- lock tanned, A popular delusion that the centary plant bloows but once ina hundred years, is dis- pelled by the action of a specimen cf the Agave Hendeisoni, var, Mexicanna, a native of Central America, after fifteen years, which is now in blossom in the rotunda of the Na tionsl Maseum, and attracts a large uumber of visitors, A loug flower stalk shoots up from the center of the plant and attains its growth in about eight weeks, during which time the' flower cluster 18 _developed ~with & stalk eight or ten feet high, There are nu merous off -shoots from the eide near the top, covered with long trumpet-shaped 1'ossoms somewhat resembling the flower of Yucce, or Spanish bayonet, This century plant will prolably bo in blossom for about two weeks, ~Philadelphia New: ——————— It 18 argued that the Engllesh will yet be the univereal langusge, This may be 80, but St, Jacob’s Oll goes to so many lands that directions for fits uee are printed tn eleven languages. It con- (uers paln everywhere. The vatura! bridge in Rockbridge county, Virginia, is 215 feet high, 100 feet wide, und has a spau of 90 fee e —— When Eaby waa sick, we zave her Caatoria, When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria, g to Castoris, ve thom Castoria When she bocame Miss, she ¢ Wheu shie bad Childrey, THE JLAMAN RE Rheumatism, 'lxour.ilg ache S0 ALL OTHER BODILY PAISS AND ATHirS i 11 8 A VOGELER €O, (Sowsermor BalUmore, ML, €, 4 A, DOCTOR WHITTIE 7 pagcrn Nervous Physical Weakness Eans of Throat, Skin ol dobility, Mar urial ang otny 8, 8lond Po'.. Prosiration Disoases Arising % (posure or 1ndulgence, whiss | rodue! . RRIAG the Skin and relievedand ice used in al or by le s AT o s v L OO ISR EXTRACT Red Clover Blossom Trnaca, Mich,, Feb, 8, 158 2.M. Locse & Co, MonmoR, Mich. GExTS =1 sl your Fluid Extract Red Clover Blossowm and Wot Conpress for Cancer on the bre a Tam satistiod it i tho boat remedy . Cancerknown, You aro welcome to uso this for the Bondic of Terinug himiani(y, Respecttully, MRS, L. A. JOHNSON. Scrofula. To; 0., January 17, 189 3. M. Toosr & Co., GENTLENFY: oth ulous aiscase, and found wave your Extruct of ited Cloveratrin, PPy €0 say she lias experioncea grent relier 3 but s slight testimonial of my appraciation o your efforts in’ Lehalf of 1 ity, which you ary Welcome to use for their b 1L ARMS, o 11D, Vary Foopeott Red Clover, :wfl?n‘“‘i.v;:‘ h me, Think you 500 medicius oW Yours truly. W. M. SEIBERT, Fover &SGoros. R g Nyman, of Grand Raride, THE BEST THING OUT FOR Washing & Bleaching In Hard or Soft, Hot or Cold Water, 8AVES Latow, Tiws and Soar AwAziNony, and gives anversalsatistaction. No fawmlly rich or poor should be without It. 8old by all grooers, BrwARK of Imitations well de. slgue to mislead. PRAKLINK s the ONLY BAYK labor aaving compound and always beara she above sym: bel and name of JAMES PYLE WEW YORK, H.W.WETHERELL., 155 and 157 Wabash Avenut, Hair Cloth and Wire Bustles, Hoop Skirts, Hair Cloth Skirts,r BLACK 410~ ) COLORED s———— JERSEYS, Large Lots at Reason- able Prices. & Gool 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. *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- ploynient there a year hence. This oifers great inducements to Jaboring men to secure homes now while they are cheap. Specula- torswill ulso find it to their advantage to buy at present prices. The company Lave 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, MANUFACTU! Marnufacturers of all kinds will find itto theiraq to inspect this property; good location, level grounds, track tacihities and plenty of good pure water furnished by th South Omaha Water Works, “In fact, every facility bo w ble for manufacturers, including cheap ground. BUSINESS MEN Will find it profitable to select property now, as a year or two hence with a population of HOUD” to L0000 po ple, this will become a desirable place for all kinds of busi and lots bought now, can be had at very reasonable pric; which will double in price many times in the next two v EVERYBODY, Rich or poor, will find it profitable to make in/estments 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 tha sale of all this property from G streetssouth. Splendid lots from $225 upwards, BEDFORD & SOUER 213 S.xl4th STREET, We have desirable business and residence propsrty “for s lein all parts of Omaha and do a general real estate business, ~ We olicit by ers and sellers to call on us. We will give themfall possibla information free; and keep conveyance freeito show property§in any,part of the city, Bedford & 'Souer, A