Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 22, 1885, Page 2

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THE DAILY BEE--WEDNESDAY, JULY 2 DYSPEPSIA 1t i de *Li ONIWKCO3Y SISID9INYA QNY SNYIOISAHA BEST TONIE. d complt-ly Cures Dyspepain in all fnrtbien, eleiini Fakting e 00 §enrichon and bt i favs'chn gyt o ads [ ¥y oRRITER, the First Roformed Charch, Baltin “Iaving used Bro and Indi mending 1t bikh And invikorator, and very strey Genuine has Above trade mark okl e N o taining liet of prizes for rocipes, information about coins, oto,, given away by all dealers in medicine, or mailod to &ny addross o receipt of 5s. stamp. . AXRUNNY RCLARNEAY Lo BHOAD Grash 1 BEYT OPERATING SOICKEST SELLING AND T RATECT COORIHG STOTE Wayre piteced 1o The oubin a7 Sead 0 Works. Ad 186 Nouth Cl OTED B Boyal Havana Lottery | (A QOVERNXENT INSTITUTION.) Drawn at Havana Cuba, Every 10 to 14 Days. Tickots in Fifths; wholos $5; Fractions pro rata, Bu0jeck 10 B0 mABIPTIALioR, 10Y coatrolied by ihe pardleain intorest. 14 Is ihe falroek thing in dhe sature of chance In existonoe. Tor tickets apply $0 BHIPSEY & CO., 1212 Broad ty;, or M.OTTENS & CO, 619 Main 81, Frightful Case of a Colored Man, 1 contractod 8 fearful cage of blood polson In 183, waa treated ja0mo of the best physiclans in At: Ianta, They used the old remedies of mercury and potash, which brought oa rheumatism, and impair- ed my 'digestive organ>. _Every joint in mo was swollen and full of pain. When I was given up to dlo my physiclans thouight it would bo a oud timo £ tost the virtuos of Swift's Specific. When 1 com- ‘monced taking 8. 8. B., the physician said 1 could not live two weeks under the ordinary treatmest. Ho commencad to give mo {he medicing strictly ac- tions, which I continued for several nothiog else and continued to {m- sory first. Soon the rbeumatiem ft me, my appetito becamo all right, and tho ulcors whioh the dootor uaid wera the “most frighttul he had ever scen, begaa to heal, and by the 1st of Oo- Sobor, 1884, 1 wae & well man again. 1 am stropger now than I ever was before, and weigh more. 8. 8. 8. hss saved me frow an early grave, Ly McCLENDON, TLom McOlonkon has beon 1nthe employ of the Choss3Carlay company foe some Aoars, and 1 know the above statements to Lo true. At tho time he Degan taking Bwifty Speciflc o wes in & horible con- dition, I regard hls cure almost miraculyus. W. B. Cosiy, Managor. Atianti Disision, Tuk Swivr Sercivic Co., Dianer 3, Atlanta, Ga., N, Y., 167 W. 280 8¢, 00.,or DR. H. TRESKOW, h |triat NEW VORK. RIDGE'S FO0D A phy slean of largo practice says of Rridge's Food 1 cau say of this proparation of food that it has ¥ failod to agroo when glven strict direct ons. With scrupulous care, there need be yorylittle trouble from bowel com: plainte; and co this that | asceibo tho tect 1hat 1 have never yet 1ot s onild with avy foim cf diarthwa or cholera lufantum " PENNYROYAL FILLS “CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH." sine, BER. Ch REfrull AV Drugglats. Tiado supplied by J. A. Fuller & Co unel? " NEW ENGLAND ATROCIOUS WORK. Five Yonog Women from Germany Des- fined for Davenport, Disappeer in Chicago. A Young Man Awaits His Betrothed in Vain—A and Re- ward Withont Result, Search Davenport Democrat, July 19, 1f bellef of friends of the victims In Davenport be confirmed, Chicago has recently heen the scene of as dlabolical, tofamous, and woefal a crime In the ab- duotlon of young women for vile pur- possn as any that have hsen exposed by the Pall Mall Gazette In London, and which have so excltsd that great city and oreated feelings of horror throughout the clvilized world. And strange It la, that tho facts of the infamy in Chleago are now made public for the firat time, though a fortnight has olapsed since they were known to the infercited friends of tke victims In Dav- enport, THE OPENING FACTS are these: Three months slnce a young man named Christlansen Panlsen, arrlved in Davenport dlrect from Schleswlg- Holste/n, his natlve land. He possessed a fortune of §15,000, which he intended to Invest In a farm In this county. He went to the house of Ma. J.F.Fuelacher, grocer, 1116 West 8econd street, a frlend whom he knew In the old country. He desired to get employment on a farm In this county, 8o as to famillarize himself with the methods of agricalture here, and Mr, K. securad him a place with Mr. W. H. Jonee, an extensive farmer in Lincoln township. Mr. Pauleen is a young wan—in the early 20's. He was BETROTHED when he left home to a young woman named Nickollno Wacker, and In a month after ho entered Mr, Jones' om- ploy ho wrote to her, telling her to como to Davenport for marrlage on her ar- rival. He made arrangements with Mr. Fuelscher for her ontertalument, and rented two rooms at 1414 wess Fourth for resldence after marriage, The young woman arrived in New York harbor with the eteam¢r Harmonla from Hamburg, and was taken 11l in Castle Garden, where che rematned two wecks. The day be- fore she intended to statt for Davenport, tho steamer Frissla arelved In port, and the emigrant pacsengers went into Castlo Garden. Among them wese FOUR YOUNG WOMEN, Anna Rolff, Anna Hansen, Mary Hase, Marguerita Ettessen, nineteen to twenty- one yesrs of age, and two young men, Jokn Jungo and Peter Behrena—all hav- ing tickets for Davenport, One of the attendants at the Castle Informed Mrs, Wacker of thls and advised her to travel to Davenport with them—and the next day the five young women and the two young men left New York on a Pennsyl- vania Central traln for Davenport. Their baggage was checked through to Daven- port. They arrived at the P., Ft. W, & C. depot. IN CHICAGO. Thursday, July 2d at 10 o’clock In the forenoon, They wero directed to two transfer hacks to bo conveyed to O., R. L. & P. depot. The five girls and Junge went into one hack, and the driver told Behrens to get Into the other hack, Behrens’ hack started first —and the other followed Immediately. At Adams and Canal streers, Behrens' hack turned the corner—and that la the last that {s known concarning the five young women and Junge. Behrens etald at the C., R. 1. & P. depot, anxiously awalting the aral- val of hls companions, until late night train left for Davenport—and he came on with It to this clty, think- Ing the others would come the next day. Hearrlved here the morning of July 3d, and that afternoon Paulsen came In from the country tomeet his betrothed. Behrens told him hts story. Paulsen waited two days and became alarmed. Mr. Falschner wrote letters to persons whom he knew in Chicago, glving an ac- curate description of Mlies Paulsen and the four other young women, and asking them to make lnquirles. They did so— and wrote that they could galn no infor- matlon concerning the party after they left the Pittsburg depot. On the 9ih fnst. Mr. Falschner went to Chl- cago to endeavor to find the partles, He called on Mr, John Kundinger, the emigrant passenger agent for the P., St. W. & C. rallroad, and told him the story. Mr. K. remembered the party very well; he taw them leave the depot andget into the hacks, and believed that they were perfectly safe in thelr ride for the C, R. 1. & P., depot. He was astonlshed and perplexed by Mr. Fuelscher's etory. The result was that Inferoation concernlng the missing persons was lodged at police headquar- ters, and Mr. I, says he was treated very courteouely by the police, Policemen and detectives were immediately directed to commento search, and they dld so. Paulsen sutborized Mr. F. to offer a roward of §200 for the finding of his botrothed, Mr. Fuelscher sald every Gierman hotel and boardleg house in the clty wero vlsited, as were many boarding houses and hotels kept by other forelgn nationalitles and not the lesst trace of the lost persons was found, The r¢sult was that Kuondinger and the :I:tuctivea came to the concluslon that Lo FIVE GIRLS HAD BEEN ABDUCTED for Infamous purposes. Behrens remem- bers that the drivers of the hack which the five girls and Jange boarded wore a blue and white striped apron, ‘‘like a beer driver,” he puts it, Another strange circumstance is the fact that the bsggage of the young women and Junge was all checkod for Davenport,as was that of Behrens, Behrens’ baggage came on all right, Fut the baggage of the others has never boen recelved here, The attire of the young women was fuolly descrlbed to the Chicago police, Lena Wacker was dressed Inblack; Anna Rolf and Anna Hansen both wore dresses in white and black check, and Mary Hass wore a pur- ple dress, All were clad neatly and com- fortably, 1f the young women were vlotims of foul play, it was oasy enongh for the vil- lains in whose hands they were to secure the baggage checke and galn possesslon of thelr trunks, The trouble {s thatsomuch stopping of baggage by emlgrante themselves s dove in Chlcago that the baggsgemaster at the Fort Wayne depot cannot remember these partloular pleces. Persons present checks, request that the baggage wmay be glven them, and 1t is done, without a thought that the holders of the checks are not the owners, or are not comumfe- sioned to take charge of the baggage. Another eusplelon arises here: WHO WAS JUNGE | He told Bohrens and the young women that his destination was Fort Dodge, but thet he conldu’t buy a ticket at Hamt bure for that vlace, and so had bough- one for Davenport Nelther Behrens nor any of the yonng women had ever seen him before. Ho was attired like a fresh young Holsteiner, and talked like one, Might he not have been a depraved, heartless, bratal scoundrel, hired for the very purpose of traveling as an emigrant from Germany and of betraylng young women, travellr ¢ without nesr frlends, into the hands of unconscionable heings like himself In Chicago, Young Paulsen is in deep distrers over the dlsappearance of his bstrotbed. Magbe she told Junge on her way to Chfcago of her Intentlons when arrlving at Davenport, and of the meansat her lover's command— and the abduction was FOR IMPECUSIOUS YOUNG MEN, Iigurcs to Show That They Oan Set Up Housekecping for $55. St, Louis Post-Dispateh, It will doubiless open the eyes of some young soclety people who have recently tried housekeeplng after tho most ap. proved modern plan, to learn that this can easily be done for $55; and that, too, with only a small part of the total oot In pocket, 1f tho time.payment privilege should be taken advantage of, On this basls §75 will clothe, pay wedding ex- penses, barring a tour, and will start a young man In good style, and marriage dwindle from a mountain to a mole hill, for the purpose of recelying a rlch re- ward, TIf that bein the plot, he needn’t walt long. When one thinks of the probable fate of the five young women—and of the awful dlstress that must possess thelr sonls—the thought 1s agonizing. D— THE SUWANEE RIVER, A Description ot the Beautiful Scen- ery Throngh Which It Passes, San Franciaco Chronicle. The other day *wo or three of us, boon companfons—well, there were some thir- ty or forty cf usin the excureion—went to that spot famous In song and story— the Suwanee river, The ride to the gulf has already been descrlbed; suffice it to say that the trip was swlft and agreeable. The jungles had lost none of their bean- ty, the splendld magnollas were in bloom, the grand oaks were garlanded with gl- gantlc grape vines, and the moss was as gray, sllken and fantastic as ever. One taken a small steamer golng for some dls- tance along the galf, and after a night's rest, looks from the shelterod deck upon the lovely Suwanee. Tho river is qulte as large as the upper S5 John’s, bending in and out In Innumerable curves for over one hundred miles. In its clear watcra you can see the fish leaping and swlmming. Every bend throughout its entlro course seems moro graceful than the last; every stretch more romantic add beantiful. Nowhera in the verdure more {ropical, and as far ss the eyo can reach one eoes an unbroken llng of symmetry. 1f some gardener had the care of the trees on elther slde his work would - call for hearty admiration, but it Is all the handlwork of nature, that magnificent Having secared two pleasant rooms in & respeotable nelghborhood, the first thing the palr will want is the furniture. If they keep their eyes In one directlon they can get It, and out of a furnliure shop, at little cost. They can purchase a substantial fmitation walnut bed for §2, @ mattress for the same price, and a spring for 81; slx chalrs will cost §3, a washstand $2, a dlning table $2.50, bu- reau $7, kitchen table $1 10, two plllows $1.20, and a center table for sltting room $2 60, making a total of $24 20. Of course this presumes that they are begin- ning at thls time of the year, when no preparations for cold weather will be needed, and also that the lady haa been Industrious enough to provide herself with linen and coverlng. The next Im- portant conslderation ls the kltchen. A gasollne stove can bo obtalned for §5, or & cook stove as low as 7. At this time of the year the young woman will take a gasollno stove as far as the moro com- | * fortable and convenlent of the two. This, with the necessary utensils, will cost about 8. China wlil bo the next thing to be got. By a due attentlon to detalls, o sot of china large enough for a family of two or three, can ba obtained for §5, and a tet of glasses for 25 cents. a toilet sat will cost $3 25, These are all good ware, not chipped or broken, bat new andeound. A half dezen each of tea and tablespoons, silver-plated, will cost $L.50, and a eet of knlves and forks, with carvers will cost §1 75, Very cheap car- pots can be hought, but a neat and com- fortable a rubatituts as can be found will bo tasteful Ingram rug, and the young man can spend a leisare hour palning the floor around it. This rug, large enough for a moderate-sized roon, can be had for §, This wlll complete the list of abso- 'eD STan TRADE }K‘,'\ MARK' STARCN oucH@URE thsolutely from Opiates, Enctics and Poisons. A PROMPT, SAFE, SURE CURE t For Conghs, So; Inflnenzs, Colda. Hrone Asthima, @ Price 80 cent: rs. Par 2y detter 1o promp®y getit.ror oltles, Ezpredscharges paidy by & THE CILAR ONPANY, ryland, U, 8, A DOCTOR WHITTIER 617 St, Charles 88, 8t Louis, WMo, ¢ rEratune ot buo W el Gelioses, has e <o 1 clty papers Nervoug Pros: Fhysical Weakness tions of Throat, Skin atd Sores and Ulcers, ickes [ tion, Oebility, Menis Mercurial and otne sextAilsing from {ndiscrotlon, Ex du bich 1 MARRIAGE © I8 UIDE ! wall of green—not & shrub ecems to be broken, not a faded leaf can be seen, on a long, vast, unbroken hedge of emerald, and underneath a grecnsward like a car- pet, interlaced with lincs of gold and bars of silver, where the sun throws vivid or falnter beama down athwart the cool, deep shadows. “Dar's whar de old folks Iib,” says & awarthy deckhand, as he dofis his rimless hat, showing broad white ivorles and lsughlng back to laughing faces ashore. Sure enough, In yonder tiny bondisa (1 sth rooms have closets large enough for Jittle hut bullt of logs, and two or three clothing and houszhold articles and sup- colored children stand on the greensward | plies, If such Is not the case a commo- to eee ‘do boat rlde.” Asif toadd|dious wardrobe can be supplied for $6 50 pathos and | realty to the poet’s vision, | and a kitchen safe can be added for $2.50. there comes out an old, old man, his | This will add to a total of §) making the head whitened with tl{a frost of age, and [ total cost §64, To most young people stands Jeaning on a stick to watch us out | {his would be going to housekeeping on a of sight. very narrow margin, probably too nar- ZAnd later on comes the moon to add to | row for the majorlty, but it can be done, the wltchery of the surroundings. Over |and there csn doubtlees be an immense yonder the river has washed in undor the | amount of solld comfort and happiness live oaks, the fall cypress and the plnes. | igcloged in the hou lutely necessary thipgs, and it will sum up as follows: Furaiture, ete China and glassware. . Stove and utensils Knives and forks. RPug. . Toilet sot. Sundries Total.coieosecnrnnrnnsanss This estimate of courge, supposes that 8910 expori 18 at onc sonal or by letter, sac icines sent by Mail as package to indicate conten appropriate remedy Consultations, per- nfidential, No nder. Address DR.JAMES,No. 204Washingten St.,Chicago,l1l. R T AR I VT R “THEONLT YROB 4 IRON L ALY Tpe L i St Years ogo the Inclan and his wigwam — dotted these shores. T have no doubt|a successful Experiment with Storsge they were as wild, and perhaps as way- Batteries and Motor, ward, as their brothers of the west—re- | no vory Sun. T e oo 4o et | A sucecssful tost and demonstration of X | tho electric storsge battery as a motive fire to the peaceful habltations of the R HG white settlers along the borders, In all [POVer for city passengor railways was made yesterday on the Union passenger B kP2, Teat meiohatd [ rallway from tho siables on Huntingion ancivilized natures, though Its waters|8Venue to Hampden, Baltimore county, and return, Eighteen persons were in may ave kuot than clamnee i the (50 00, LSS, Pk "o v some muslc In them, however, for notlce | °% )"“';[":' ehe,) "1'.:“ 8 otalof g"“ :“‘é the names of thelr towns and rivers. By | on¢-hall tons. 0] [oaL, “RI0vec oNs.0 and by we reach a plantation, but it ls in the gnld‘lpnlug!g ovurdgudeu of ‘I’a,': i“v" rulns. Yet it blends well with the soft, to the mi °llm nd,ionn . ;‘"v“ i :l sey: oad boanty of the night. Whother or not | €1ty-five feet radius with ease and com- 1t is “de ole plantation,” who can tell. fort. The batterles used on the occasion We know that once 1t was peopled with [ Were simply the }-horse-power. not even - tive power, but for Incan- happy family groups, massa’s children [made for motive power, : e 1o L o tkling. motae | descent light. ButMr. Rauer, the elec of *do banjo” were heard under the triclan, after figuring out the subject, oaves, the negroes sang thelr plaintive dectded that even with these small boxes molodies, while “do white folkses” tool | ® Btreet car could‘ be run, as was fully thelr eas> on the now desctted lawn that | demonstrated. | Forty-nine of the little +e | +-horse-power boxes were placed in the :ldogpx:!.n ‘gvag:;',:’ .fc::vvr;mtlo fl:i“:;x:: (;ID and copnected with the Daft elactrlc motor. Oa level grades only twenty- ::du (::h;l;l:;: ‘;: :';;0 :;:;m::btg;:%'fh}gf nine of these boxes were used,the loaded liage, of color, of water, of sky, chal- |2t making easlly six miles an hour. Oa ) ) f 35 o lange our admiratton. It Iu the paradise | tho 230-feot grade the forty.nlne boxes of the south—thoe wonder-wllds of Flor. | Were used, equal to 8 G-10 horse-power. tda—and tourlsis who do not investigate| A storage battery especially construct ite beautl ed for street-car purposes would consist e o havo ost much that would | f onc horse-power boxes lostead of one- et quarter, and abont slxty-five would be re- quired. Tho stcrage company yosterday PILES!! PILES! PILES!!!|etmply placed thelr small boxesIn tho A rure cure for Blind, Bleeding, Itching | moter-car used by the Daft company. In ?;"1 ‘“!:‘l;mh'd ("lle; h;\_« been ‘llllwm"-r"d 15y | practlcal usage theso boxos will bo placed r. Williams, (an i edy), o, N Wiikisms' Tadian Tils. intment.” A igls | 1nder tho seats of the ordinary passen- box has cured the worst chronic cascs of 25 or | gor car. Thoe car will be atarted or 80 yoars standing, No one need suffer five [stopped by eimply turning a switch. An minutes after applying this wonderful sooth- | orainary hand-brake was used yesterday, ing mediciuo, Lotiona and instruments do f though this in fature will be” dono by more liarm than good, Williame' Indion | il e Vile Ointment absorb o J intente Ktching, (sarbicalaly” st st ‘atisy | _Tho frst advont of tho atorago battery etting warm in bed), acts o o poultice, gives | In this country was on the steamship instant relief, and is prepared only for Piles, | Labrador, In November, 1882, at whlch itching of private parts, u?d lurluuthing elee. | (ime the rights under the patents for SKIN DISEASES CURED Marylend, Distrlet cf Columbla and by Dr. Frazier's Mogic Ointment. Cures s | Wes!, Virglnis were purchased by Mr. A. if ;;‘yl.‘u?\m ‘ll‘n]xgwlr-;,li ck {{I-'ng- w]“"lflm G, Davis, who from then untll now has —Blotckes and Lruptions on the face, le i tho skin clear and beautiful. Also cures ltch, | Bad faith that he would, In due time, Salt Rhume, Sore Nipples, Sore Lips, and | tako the ride glven yestorday, and to that old, Obstinate Ulcers, end, laboring with a few friende, has :*anl]{i;y dr&gghu, or mailed on receipt of [spent thousands of dollars. His factory, price, 50 cents, the Viaduct, Is the only concern in |this At retail by Kubn & Co, and Schroeter & ST ) bt by O/ 1. G 6 country which has made experlments Bochls Ak wholesalo by 0, ¥ Goodiamn, | o fially demonstraied. tho practice , use of the storage battery. This battery )\lln:;‘:l%muu‘;“l‘:l:lr;n:mey years old before & | ") ¢ 10 competitlon with the electric — ——— motor, for a dynamo has to bo used first Morgan Brown's Luck |to produce the electriclty and store It, Cashed, and then to recelve and dlscharge it. The It has been ascortalned that Morgan | 8torage battery would supersede the need Brown, attorney-at-'aw of this city, and | ¢f tbe third rall on passenger railway formerly 8 olork of Secretary of State Al- | tracks when eleotrlolty Iy applied, The lson, was the lucky holder of cne fifth of | 08r will carry the power with it. The ticket No. 51,100, which drew $150,000 | storage battery at the same tlmo that it in the Loulsiana State Lottery. The |!s used for power can be utllized forlight money has boen collected and {s now on | Any number of Incandescent lsmps can deposlt’ In the First National bank cf |bo sttached to the battery, aud thus a Nashvllle.—Nashville Banner, June 23, {03 will have with it at all times Ite power to light, The annual death rate in the City of Mxi- g0 s stated at 50 in every 1,000 of the pogu ation, Attorney e Chemlcsl tests cannot err. The most rigid of them fall to discloss any trace of morphis or opium in Red Star Cough Care, ———— Blowing Up Hell Gate has been a laborious and costly work, and the end justifies the effort, Ob-| Americans are third highest in point of etruction In any important chanpel | number of the foreigners residing in Japan, means dlsaster. ~ Obstructions In the ———— organs of the human body bring lnevite- ble diseese, Theymust be cleared awsy, or physical wreck wlll follow, Keep the liver in order, and the pure blood courses through the body, conveylng health, Whon Baby was sick, we zave her Castoris, strength and life; let it become dieor dered and the channels are clogged with {mpuritiee, which result in diceaze and death. No other mediclne cquals Dr, Pierce's ‘‘Golden Medlcal Discovery” for actiog upon the liver and purifying the blood, When sho was a Child, she cried for Castoris, When she became Miss, sho clung to Casteria, Whea sbo lad Clilldres, shie gave thom Castoria i enfo v, e )] 'S EXTRA 3 LOOSE H RED CLOVER _BLOSSOM The Great Blood Purifier. , Tuaons, Anc TARRH, SALT RHED yat1sM, and all blood PRICE $1 PER PINT BOTTLE, OOSE'S RED CLOVER PILLS, Cure Sick Head- 4 ache, Dyepepsia, Indigesticn, and Constipation. Boxes of £6 pill: ents; b boxes #1 Loosk's Rep CLOVER PILE RE: Y, sure cure, ¢ per box. For sale by all druggists, or address WOO0SE & CO., Monre , Mich d or testimor AFINE LINE OF s &1 —Al WOODBRIDGE BAS, THE ONLY EXOLUBIVE MUSIE, HOUSE IN OMAHA NEB CONS AY0 & Dot uso (housanis o standing have been cin fnits 0 togels Wany sufl bt Lots in Denver Junction Weld County, Colorado, Denver Junction is & new town of about 200 nhabitants, laid out in 15854, on the great truuk railway scross the continent, at the Junction of the Julesburg Branch, 197 miles from Denver, The town is on eecond bottom land of the Platte River, the finest location betwsen Omaha and Denver, and is surround ed by tho 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., sre putting buildinge bere, while the expect: ed 800D £0 conE 1o place, The presant chance for good investments in town lots will soarcely ever ba equaled elsewhere, For sale by the lot or block in good terms by H. M, WOOLMAN, Junction Colo Town Agent, Dar DREXEL & MAUL, Srocessops 10 JoaN (G, Jaocoss, UNDERTAKERS | 1d ¢ 4011417 Farnam § j tole- cited aud promptly aite Telophoue Orders tod b A BEAUTIFUL TOWN ELEGANTLY LOCATED, Large Lots at Reason- able Prices. 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. 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- This offers great inducements to laboring men to secure homes now while they are cheap. Specula- 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 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 ‘limity to the works. MANUFACTURERS. Manufacturers of all kinds will find it to 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, 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 (i streetssouth. Splendid lots from %223 upwards, EDFORD & SOUER 213 Sxl4th STREET, We have desirable business and residence proparty *fori'saleLia [all parts of Omaha and do a general real estate business, ' We olicit. biiy- ers and sellers to call on us, We will give them§all possible information f) veyance {ree to show propertyfin anyipart of the city, Bedford & 'Souer,

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