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i | | i — [ N “TLY BEE--. ATURDAY. '.fY THE DAILY BEE- MONDAY, JULY 20, 1885. — - I EARLY DAYS IN NEBRASKA. The Great Omaha [ndian Tribe aud Iis Destruction, BROWN'S IRON BITTERS WILL CURE The Trials and Privations of Early HEADACHE Missionaries Among the Sav INDIGESTION ages=Traditional History of BILIOUS S the Tribes, DYSPEPSIA e — ull\ll“l\(})\(l,: PROSTRATION Weitten for the ”‘:‘n' c CHILLS axp FEVERS The welter paased in bls trip up the TIRED ANG Missourl rlver to take some notlce of GENERAL DEBILITY Blackbled, the Omaha ohief, and of the PAIN v 1ue BACK & SIDES IMPURE BLOOD CONSTIPATION FEMALE INFIRMITIES RHEUMATISM NEURALGIA KIDNEY AND LIVER TROUBLES FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS The Genuine has Trade Mark and crossed Red Lines on wrapper. TAKE NO OTHER. Omaha trlbe of Indlans, for those In. dlans are more nearly associated with us than any others. We are their successors in the possession of these lands; they ars our nearest neighbors, and the lead- Ing commerclal city of the state takes Its name from them, As stated in a former letter, the Omahas were once a great and warllke people, but after the deadful ravages of ——— | the emall-pox, they dwindled down In numbers and strength tlll they became a small and feeble tribe. When Nebrasks was openea for settlement in 1855, the Omahas were located in what ls now Sarpy county, a little west of Belevue, but they were soon afterwards ‘removed to thelr present locallty on the Omaha reservation, The Presbyterian mission to the Omabas, which had been located at Belevuo since 1847, was now removed to Blackblrd, (on the reservatlon), for which spaclous buildings were erected. It may bo eafely aseerted that theOmahas have advanced further in civilizatlon, in agriculture, and In self-sustaining habits, than any tribe west of the Missourl, though the Winnebagoes and Poncss are nearly keeplng pase wlth them. The Omahas had held thelr lands In severalty for many years, and they cal- tivate thelr farms, and raise crops, after the manner of the whites, and maintain themselves, They have scheols upon the reservation eo that their children have the advantage of educatfon. The rela- tlons between them and the whites have been pleasant and peaceful, both main- taining the conditions and observances of friendly nefghborhocd, They have gen- erally adopted the dress and hablts of our people, though 1t {s to ba hoped that some of the hideous deformitles which mark the modern stylo of dressing by some ladies, which may be designated the GRUAD GLAN SUICKEST SELLING AND 41 PERTECT CONRTAG $TOVE e #gin he sublic der the auspices of the Baptist denomination, havlng gone to them about the year 1835, Rev. Mr. Alice and Rey. Mr, Dunbar went as mis- slonnties to the Pawnees about the same yeur, but were compelled to leave them them on account of thelr wars with the Sloux. Mr. Allce was llving at St Mary's (now In the Missouri river), nearly opposlte Bellevue, where Ne- braska began to settle, He accompan'ed the writer as Interpreter twice to the village of the Pawnees to hold councll with them, Col. Manypenny, then commlesloner of Indlan affairs, made an agreement with the Omahas and Otoes at Bellevue In 1853 for the purchase of Nebrasks, in accordance with which a treaty was made and ratified the next spring, which was followed by the-paesage of the Nebraska and Kansas blll. Mr. Hamllton located the new misslon at Blackbird on the res- ervation in 1856 and removed there with everything that pertalned to the mlssion that year, and had _ the bullding for the sohool completed and ready for occu- pancy early in the spring of 1857. He 18 now llving at Decatur, Durt county, bordering on the reservation, still en- gaged in hls favorite mlissionary work, Thus, for nearly fifty yoars, through all the hardships, sufferings and dangers in- cldent to that long perlod of time on the frontler, through sunshine and storm, through darkness and dlscouragement, oft-times falnt and weary, but never despondent, never ylelding, he and his companlon have moved steadlly forward in the way where duly pointed, till they now approach the end, ripe In the falth which has sustalned them through 8o many years of struggle and trlal. The Influence of Mr. Hamilton as a mlesionary, adviser and friend of the Indian, 1s seen In the present prosperous, clvlilzed and Christianized conditlon of the Omahas, For most of the facts and dates hereln glven the writer Is indebted to Mr. Ham- {lton. As showling the traditional history of the several Indlan tribes named in these | letters, the following extract ls here glven from a letter of his to the writer: *The traditlon of the Omahas s, that they (the Omahae) the Otoes, the lowas, and the Poncas came to this country per- haps 500 years ago. They came from tho goutheast, beyond the Ohlo, and traveled together; crossing the Miestssippl not far from St. Louis or St. Charles. They traveled by different steges on the eaat, or north slde of the Mlssourl river, en- camplng for a cime on different streams, especially on James, or Jim river, In Da. kota, and continuing thelr journey north and west till they crossed to the south slde of the Missourl some dlstance up, and then gradually traveled downward to- gether, the Otocs and Towas golng be- W camel-back style, will not be patterned by the Indian women. There are some customs and hablts of the whites which the Indlans ought to avold, and one of them Is this modern style of female archi- tecture. Last year the writes saw sevoral of the Omahas, farmers, coming into Decatur D | with thelr loads of produce from their farms and exchanging them for grocerles and other artlcles of famlly use. They fllustrated fully just what civilization and christianity have done, i dolng and will do for the Indians. Why the government has not adopted this same policy with all 18 CONDUCTED BY the Indlans is one of those puazling Royal Havana LO“O!‘, { |[things which no one can find out. There (A GOVERNMENT INSTITUTION.) is but one soverelgn remedy for our Urawn at Havana Cuba, |Indlan troubles, but one solution of the Every 10 to 14 Days Indfan questlon, and that 1s, as has been Tickets In Fifths; wholos §5; Fractions [:m rate, | Urged by some for years, dlsarm the In- Babject 10 o manipulation, ot coatrolied by the | 4lans, glve them lands in severalty, teach paritesin {ntorest. It is dhe falvosd Shing In #he | them how to farm, civiliza them, and if AN 'Lf"“,":"“{‘; ¥ & CO., 1212 Broaa | they won’t work then, let them starve. "Clty;, or M.OTTENS & CO, 619 Main 84, | The government under the influence of Ka the Interlor department permits arms to be rold to them, makes warrlors of them, Frightful Case of a Colored Man, |ana thon has to’ight them to keap thom in subjection. The people of this coun- 1 contracted a fearful caso of blood polson in 1533, | ¥y pay milllons and milllons of dollars was treated by gome of the best physiclans in At- | every year to feed lazy buck Indians who lant. They used the old remedies of morcury and | wonld soorn to work, Thls whole policy potash, which brought oa rheumatiem, and impair- ¢ ©od my 'digestive organa. _Evory joint in me was |18 wrong, :fi'"’"m --,\‘d l‘ul‘llfll p’nh-- . mgfll AT given Ly n:o The only white persons the writer found e my physitns Wi ¢ outd bo 8204 40|, Nobraaicn in May, 1354, wero tho Rev. menced taking 8. 8. 8., the phys'cian said I could | Willlam Hamllton, Presbyterlan misslon- Hoyveltpolneskamncorithe ordinney, .m‘c‘:“‘“:"’; ary to the Omaha Indians, then located oording 0 dircotions, which I continuod for scvoral | 8¢ Bellevue, In_ charge of 'the mission es- months. I took nothing else and continued to im- | tablished there under the ausplces of the o drom the ot s Seom, the shonoion | Progbtorlan bosed, Poter A, Sarpy, In- hich the doctor said wero tho :-a:% trighttul bo dlan trader, and his mum:lausri Cor’xx‘xlnlnT over scen, began to how', and by the 18t ot 0o- | dore Stephen Decatur, so called, elr ot aver s bafore, stk weigh o, 5.8 & | trading post was at Bellevue, standing has eaved we from an early grave, © right where the Bellevae depot is now SIS L Mo Oumnp e, located. Mr. Hamilton, it 1s belleved, owcinonk»n has lrmun i the umplo“)' Iofk the | has baen longer identified with Nebraska nossdCarley company fog samo woars, an 0% | than any person now living, except, per- é?:.'.!’i‘.fis'..‘:‘::‘u:?*a:chn“a‘;‘u“;.a L haps, some of the oldest Omaha and dition. I regard his cure almost miraculous. Otoe Indlans. He left Pennasylvania Chess.Carley Co, Atianth Diviaion, | With i3 lifo companion In 1839, and Adinnta, Gu., April 18th, 1885, journeyed Ilwmllyhlnltohtl:)a1 vulldu of the Tormlo by allorugxise s . far west to make their habltation among mmr:aw'; Isln:’xll::‘fd éffi'.‘;J'.'Ii‘u'fih“){-fi’;'gfi',"('}'n.. the children of the plalns, They conse 2167 W. 280 52, crated themselves to the hard, uninviting o % “|wask of enlightening, clvllllzlng and Christlan'zing the Indians, It was con- DR' ",RlcE! secrating themaelves {o alife of hard- reet shlps, toil and dangors, far away from home and kindred, and all pleasant asso- clations, with companlooship to ba found only in the savage llfe of the desert, They turned thelr backs on all that was attractlve and apparentiy werth llving for in life to tread the path of duty and of danger in the servico of their Master. This self-sacrlfice, relf-abnegation, may be set down by the caviler as sentlment, enthuslastic zal, and desire for fame, ag the early christians were charged with a desfre for acquiring the fame of mar- tyrdom; but it must be something higher ’ and nobler than senclment, desire for RIDGE S F reputation, that leads men and women to forsake the endearments and pleasures of civll'zad life to bear the cross iato the in contradis- | Wildernesy and there tread the wine pross fon upon the falone. This splrlt ot self-sacrifice, self- ¢ | devotion, evinces a moral herosim that must wriog the highest admiration from the doubter, which is readlly conceded by the believer, One of the sublimest characters in all history, the apostle Paul, was made such as much by this eplrit of self sacrifice, this self devotion to the cause of Him whom he served, as by hls matchless powers of persuasion, argument and eloquence, Thls epirlt {llustrates the highest type of althulstlc falth, Mr, Hamilton and wife devoted the fiest fifteen years of their mlsslonary life to the Iowas, located fn Missouri, about twenty-five miles northweet of whers St. ' |Joe now fs, In 1853 he was asslgued to Co | the Omahas, and with bis family landed at Bellevue In June of that year. The first Presbytery formed In the Misscarl valley (the writer does not know how it was in the lower Missour!) was orgsn- izad in 1849, and was called the Nebras. ka Presbytery. The mlselon at Bellevue was established In 1846, by Hon. Walter Lowele, a prominent citizen of Pennsyl- vanis, whom the writer well remembars having been, during a long term of yeare, in the Pennsylyania state senate, and the Rev Edward McKloney, who was the ficst mlgsionary located at Bellevue, on the eatablishment of the mlsslon there, He remained till after the arrival of Mr, Hamllton, In 1837 the Otoes were living n the Platte about olght or ten wmiles southweat of Bellevue, and Rev. Moges Merre!l was their misslonary urn One special foature of Ridge's Food, totion to othe its neutral w lowels, For ths o theo 808005 wh o Kemember Ridge's food is an old ton for five years In England aud America, 1t fs & Vertectly safo and uourishing dlot for all conditions, PENNYROYAL PILLS “CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH a ¥ D w n Bolus. Ve and tea: tdential, NEW ENGLAND CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC o In the ul-.nu.n“‘l t ton fa fore and the Omahas and I"oncas behind, tlll they reached the Nlobrsra. ThePon- cas then encamped in three circles, on account cf their great numbers, and the Omahas and the others, In two, that they might not extend over too much ground. The Poncas stald on the Nio- brara, while the others moved on south, The Omahas had camps or villages on Omaha creek, cn the Elkhorn, at Black- bird Hills, and at Bellevue, the Otces living near them at Bellevue, while the Towas moved on down and lived with the Sacs and Foxes of Missouri, or near them, in what Is called the Platte purchaze,and added to Missourl in 1837.” From this history, 1t appears that the first whito settlers in Nebracka were not the firat immlgrants Into this region; that our immedlste predecessors in the pos- session of thess lands came from a far eastern country, away bayond the Ohio, and It appears, too, that they were fm- bued with a eplrit of emigration and ad- venture, as well as their successors, for they came ‘‘to spy out the land,” and a goodly heritage did the Omahas and Otoes eelect, as we, thelr succassors bear testimony. JHON M. THAYER, GraND IsLaxn, Jaly 17 e Finding a Remarkable Cave, A party of northerners who have been prospecting for minerals In this neighbor- hood, writes a Chulagnee, Ala., corre- spondent to the New York Sun, arrlved here this morning from Riddlesbride, on the Tallapooea rlver. They report find- Ing a remarkable cave near there, and give s graphlcaccount of their meeting with the Inhabltants of the cave. The entrance to tha cave isnear the head of a small ravine, about one mjle from the Tallapoosa river, and is barely large enough for one person to enter at a time. The party entered the cave at 4 p. m., and spent two hours exploring {t. The cave ls about four hundred feet in length, varying In width from ten to sixty feet, with an average helghth of fifteen feet, and Is dimly lighted throughout by small fissures In the rccks, extending from tho roof to the ground above. When the explorers were about to leave the cave they were terrified at find- ing the exlt blocked by a writhing maes of big raatlesnakes, The nolse made by the party had dcubtless roused the anakes from thefr hiding-places among the rocks, and they had gathered in large numbars near the entrance. Deemlng discretion the better part of valor, the party re- treated to that part of the cave most re - mote from the entranca to walt for the snakes to return to their hiding-places. The explorers wers compelled to remain In the cave until . morning, . Soon after dark one of the party struck a match to light a cigar, and, after lighting 1t, threw the stll burning match on the bottom of the cave. He was startled at seeing a bright flame flash up from the rocks where the match bad fallen, which rose to the helghth of four feet, burned brightly all night and was still burning when they left in the morning, A small fissure could be ssenin the rocks beneath the flame, and the supposition {s that a volume of natural gas was escaplog through this fissure. Daylight came at last to the great re- lef of the explorers, the entire party hay- ing remaloed awake all night. Going forward to the entrance to the cave they |} found that the enakes, with the exception of one or two had gone back to their hid- log places, Those that remalned were quickly dispatched with stones, and the explorers made their exlt from the cave In safety. A large party will go from here to-morrow prepared to extinguish the snakes and fully explore this won- derful cave. —— In making the assertlon that Pozzoni's medleated complexion powder Is entircly free from Injurious or deadly polsons, we doit opon the authority of a thorough chemical analyele. It 1s one of the old- oot face powders in Amcrican market, aud Is used in the famlilies of some of our most prominent medlcal men who have personally acknowledged to the pre prletor that they not only considered it harmlees, but estecmed it highly bene- ficlal in every respect. Scld by all drug- glsts, —— — JAMES PYLE'S PEARLINE—This preparation, advertised elsewhere, is really an excellent article for saving labor in washing. It tekes the place of soap, eal-20da, and other chemical prepara- tions, THE LIM! A Discourse on Human Wickedness ~Miscellancous Business, Detroit Free Pross, \ ‘I hearn a germon do odder Sunday,” TRADE | qen/ MARK sald Brother Gardner, as he roto up and ZaranN nodded to Samuel Shin to tarn down \ / the lamps a Iittle and esonomize on oil ‘'a sermon by a white clergyman dat I can’t make fit me nohow. He 'lowed dat de world bad grown wicked at de rate of ten per cent per y'ar far de last five y'ars, an’ Incidentlally announced Yssehctely dat do increase of bibles was 600,000 per{ Free from Opiates, Emetics and Poisons. y'ar, an’ de increase of preachers about A PROMPT, SAFE, SURE CURE twelvo per cent. He waa palned to dls: | ,, coughe, Bore Throt, Monrscness, Tnflucnzey kiver a growin’ lethargy In de cause of o Y W hy rellgun, hut announced dat 5,844 new charches war built last y Ho was made sad to learn dat crlme was in- creasin’ all ober de world, but figured dat | Dau, vy twenty-two evangellsts had been steadily at work seekln’ to turn people from de error of delr wi “'I can't jlst make it out. If de world am growin’ wicked In de face of all dat Christlanlty am doin’ dar's sunthin’ wrong, 1f 4,000 new churches and 2,000 now preachers bring about a fecllng of Iethnriy on de subject of Christianity, we'd better bulld mo’ stores and fower charches, If Moody and Sankey am increasin’ crlme instead of reducin’ de rocord, dey had better ba called in, “‘De fack am, my frlends, dar was no call fur sich a sermon, an’ no pertickler cause to abuse de world. Truo Christi- anlty am held In de same reverencess a hundred y’ara ago, but Chrlatian hypoc- racy am casler to seo frew, We am placed heah as freo moralagents. If one man feels he can't be saved widout a sar- tin amount of slngin’ an’ prayln’ an’ re- pentance he should be allowed his way. If anoder man holds dat he kin occupy a front seat at de circus widout a crime bein’ charged up to him by de recordin’ angel, you haa no right to pltchinto him. If religun am not a matter of conacience what am it? If consclence guides one man to de right an’ anoder to de left you has no right to admlire one an’ condemn de oder, ‘Judge not that ye be not judged.’ “An’ when you come to aiverage up do world 1t isn’c so werry bad. Consider oar ls—our bardens—our orrows—our woos and dissppointmenta—de number- less eetbacks an’ patnful surprises human flesh am helr to, an’ de man who stead- fastly refasea to offend sgin de law or de morals of soclety am worthy of all ad- miration, ‘I want you to go the clrcus, but don’t scandalize your naybur-" I want 'you to go to de_theatre, but dcan’ use money dat should go to psy an honest debt. = [Ren Stan N teuler to prompily ties, Express charges LER CONPANT, Maryiand, €. 8, A 1 M Taltim, DOCTOR WHITTIER 517 8t, Charles Lonis, Mo, ace u 1 Sr by letter, Icines sent by Mai package to indicate conten! DR.JAMES,No. 204Washington St.,Chicago,lIl. e “I want you to slng an’ dance, but not ekip Thursday evenin’ prayer meeting to do it, “T want you to keep yer eyes open in hoss trade, but doon’ let de contribution box pass widout your dime. “I want you to sympathize with the heathen of Africa, bat keep a llttle money by you for ds heathenin your own nayburhood, Let us now proceed to attack de blzness of de meet!n’.” UNFINISHED CUSINESS, Under this head Major Cabal called up the caso of the Hon, Whereas Jones, of Selms, Ala., who was dismissed from the club abont a year ago for having been convlcted of steallng 300- pounds of cot- ten. 1t seems that the honorable was sent to prison for a year, but granted a new trial and the declslon of the lower court wes reversed on the ground that the complaint did not include tbe steal- ing of the ties and bagging around the covton. A now trlal had taken place and the prisoner had been acquitted on the grounds of {nsanity, and therefore folt at liberty to renew his application. *“Brudder Cabal, I fine you $700 and costs!” said the president in his sternest tones. “‘Dar was no question but what de applicant stole de cutton, an’ dat was de charge he was rejected on. De su- preme court hunts for technlcallties, dis club hunts for full particalars. If de ap- plicant was insane when he stole de cot- ton he am barred out by de law. If he wasn’t den he am a fraud who am barred out by de constitution. I ar’ surprised, sah, to see you renderin’ your asslstance to such a case, an’ I would advlee you to wash your hands of it at once.” *‘RESOLVED.” Judge Shellback Smith then Intro- duced the followlng resolution: Resolved, Dat our watchword shall contin- ue to be “Liberty or Death,” “What am your object, Brudder Smith¢” blandly {nquired "the president. | ¢, “W —what d’ye mean, sah?” ““Did you want to upset the guv’ment, glt up a war, bring on a flood, or what?”’ “I—dunno, sah.” *‘No, I reckon not. Brudder Smith, when a man brgins to fool aroun’ wid iiberty or death his skull wants softenin’ | Ci.o up wid & poultice. If you will mind |§ile by wld h e, your own bizoess, purvide fur your fam’ly an’ git home two hours airlier o’ nighta, liberty or death won't knock any kind buttons off your coat, Sotdcwn and ruminate!” NOTTALLOWED, L0 RED CLOVER _PLOSSOM The Great Blood Purifier. 1T CURES NeERs, HUMORS, es, ULOKN 1NG8, TUMORS, ARCi BLoon Pors CaTARRH, SALT RHEUN, ERYSIPELAS, RHE sy, and all blood and skin discases. PYLES N, A fow weeks since Judge Marrowlat = Tompkins, of Virginta, sst down In the = barn to wrlto ot an_applicatlon for ad- = misslon to the Lime-Kiln clab. A storm N arose and he was kllled, and his widow S demanded §2,000 damages of the club, She contended that if he had not been engaged o wrlting the application he would have been down cellar killldg rats, and that the club was Indlrectly guilty of his death, The matter was passed to the finence committee, and the chalrman now anuounced that the clalm would not be allowed. He had recelved a hint that the matter could be gettled for a No, 28 corset, a $3 hat and a clrcus ticket, bat he should rcfuse to establish a pre. codent, THE BEST THING OUT FOR Washing & Bleaching Tn Hard or Soft, Hot or Cold Water, BAVES Labok, Tivs and’ Soar Amazinany, snd glves aniversalsatistaction, No family rich or poor should be without it. Sold by all grocers, BRwARK of Imitations well de olgned O misload. PEARLINK is the ONLY BAVK Tabor saviog compound and always bears the above sym: bol and pame of JAME: 3 PYLE NEW YORK, ————— The cost 0x tue principal government buildlngs In Washington has been as fol reasury depariment building, 87, ; pational museum, §200,000; postoftice department, §2,151,600; print- iog office, $206,000; marlne racks, $330,630; naval hnnplm], §116,0 war and navy building, §7,02 Town Lots in Denver Junction . Weld County, Colorado, Denver Junction s 8 new town of about 200 nbabitants, 1aid out in 1884 on the great - | trunk railway across the continent, at the cultural department, - | innction of the Julesburg Branch, 107 miles sonian lastitutlon, from Denver, The town iy on ecoud bottom X A 4 and of the Platte River, the finest location mnnn.lqent,tl,1(0,000,mnnlobaarvl(nry. betwsen Omaba and Denver, and is surround. $200,204; patent oflice, i| ed by the best-laying lands west of Kearney Unlted States capitol, abont - | Junction, Neb.; climate healthy and bracing; 000, The court-house cost §275,152, altitude 3,600 feet. Denver Junction bids to money for which was ralsed by a lottery, | become an important point, as :mj ll .“l’l: R, which was drawn in Alexndrla, Vo, | B Cou o putsing up manyof their bulldivgs The princely priza was $10,000, and, | i cion to conmect 350 BxPoct though it was & sem!-government aifair, | chance for good i i 1t was never pald the holder of the lucky | scarcel tloket, by the lof e — H. M, WOOLMAN, Agent, Denver Junction Colo Imported Beer When Baby was sick, wo zavo her Castoria, ‘When she was a Child, she When she bocame Miss, sho cl Whean sho had Childres, she IN BOTTLE el ed for Castoris, to Castoria, o Whem Castoria Budwelser...... 8t Boat's M Krug's ED MAURER, 1218 Farn A BEAUTIFUL TOWN ELEGANTLY 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. ‘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 offers great inducements to laboring men to secure homes now while they are cheap. Specula- s tors will also find it to their advantage to buy at present prices. The company have made { no change from the original prices, but some 5 parties who first purchased lots have resold 7 them atsplendid profits, in some cases at 1‘; double the purchase price. If in so short a ' ime handsome profits are made, what will i be the result when evevything is fully devel- { oped ? In the few other cities that are favor- i 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. ‘ MARUFACTULLERS. Manufacturers of all kinds will find it to their advantags to inspect this property; good location, level grounds, track facilities and plenty of good pure water furnished by tha South Omaba Water Works, [n fact, every facility to make desirable for manufacturerg, including cheap ground. BUSINEES MEN Will find it profitable to select proparty now, as a year or two hence with a population of 65000 to 10,009 people, this will become a desirable place fot all kinds of business, and lots bought now, can be had _at very reasonab, which will double in price many times in the next two EVERYBODY, z Rich or poor, will find it profitable to make investments [ in this property, Free 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 Seldth STREET, We have desirable business and residence property ffor sale jin all parts of Omaha and do a general real estate business, ~ We olicit buy- ers and sellers to call on us. We will give themfall possible information Y free, ard keep conveyance free’to show propertyfin anygpart of the city, Bedford & Scuer,