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THE DAILY BEE--WEDNE \DAY, JULY 22 1885, JACOB SIMS, Attorney - at-Law COUNCIL BLUF18, I0WA. Cfee Neln Eirect Toene 7ord 8, Shogaidia vitleck, W 13aactice in S1aboard taie coor S.H.FILBERT 209 Broadway, - - Council Bluf: DRY GOODS, suffolk jon Best Joans all wor Boots and shoos at prices as 1w a clty. GHOCERIES, 18 pounds ex C_ sugar. 18 pounds granulated 18 pounds cootectionary A sugar 20 bars white Rustlan soap. Kirks. ... 40 ars Flue India soap, Kirks 22 bars Palma Tattz Bro's 18 boxes match Best wyrup, por gailon . Rost sorgham, per wailo Bett Baglish currants, 14 po 10 boxes genuive Lewia ly 52-pound cans ttrawber 5 8-pound cans peaches, i 10 8-pound cans tomatoes 0 16 pounds Michigandricd o 0 10 pounps e 0 Lorllard X tobacco p % Navy plig tobacco, per po 50 Naturailoaf tobroco, per pound 00 Flour, all brands from 82.10 to §3 50 per ct. GOODS FOR CASIT ONLY Lower Than Any Other House IN THE CITY, S. H.FILBERT: ONLY HOTEL In Council Bluffs having FIRE ESCAFPE., And all modern improvementa, call bells, fire alarm bells, etc., is the CRESTON HOUSE Noa, 215, 217 and 219, Main Street, MAX MOHN, PROPRIETOR o e 52 s e STET LINOS %es’u..l &) iy g oo Ry reas afl prin of mmnm position and el W Wt “hteago and nworth and fayorite lino between Chicago and R 1t i 0 mox el VBeat flelds and pastoral Tor Dakota: ‘ { Pundt May R. R. CABLE, E. ST. JOHN, Prest & Gon'l Mg'r, Gon'l Tkt & Pass. Agty CEHICAGO. s 1 i /- 2 Ladiew, without Shoulder Brace I.lnlll‘l‘ with Shoulder Bra f fine ( null\ d v|hlr-~l 2 00 r 50 M Lndlent, 11 fo 1 Yéars 2,00 ighly rec mvw”! 1 by the leading ea, the Fash ressimakers vmfi ent 8 in the United States and Europe, Circulars froe, LEWIS SCHIELE & CO, Sole Owners of Patent and Manufacturers, 390 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. FOR SALE BY CHARLES H. PATGH, 1517 Douglas Strect, Omaha, and leading houses everywhere, HAMBURG-AMERICAN PACKET COMPANY, Drect Line for Engiand, France and Germany. The aneamnshipa of this woll known line are et iron, In wator-tigh artmonts, and aro fa nishod' with ev }oth sate and 8tatea and Gmaha; Gronewig &3¢ Notice! Notice! Notie THE MAGNETIC HEALER, To all who a A or affitcted, n matter how long the standin, 5 For examination, our cha: for each Aratumont, or visitations §2; torms trictly cash. J H. PAGELAR, North Stato St., one milo wes: of Falr Grounds Omaha, Neb. 1.0, Box 683. Mass. Institute of Technology ]lL)STU‘( MASb 00, ——— ¢il Machauical,Min- Architoctte, ¢ hem- Regular fous Istry, Physics also admittod to partial school year boging Sey tlons June 4 and Howland, Board of Education rooms City Hall Chi~ cawo. Jadks P. MUNRON, Secrotary. FrANCIH A, WALKER, Presidont. Imported Beer IN BOTTLES. Bavaria | Culmb ESTIC. Anhauser . Schlitz P 1 ED MAURER, 1213 Farnam St Manhnnd Restored llmn!:uurhlulnn gradence & Promature Decay, Nervous Debility, Lost ood, e havin cnown Tred i vain every remedy;hasd I,l.mv:’n’ plo moansof mrr' curo, e o i s S to " wllow su Address JH.REEVES. 2 a0 Nuw CHAS. SHIVERICK FURRITURE UPHOLSTERY AND DRAPERIES, Passenger Elovator to all floors, 1206, 1208 and 1310 Farnam St. OMAHA, NEBRASKA ¥ 11 power, who are I8, who are wenk, wheo flnd their POWER S TIENC by CE, ni 1 s e o CONSUNET uoved by this treatment, and vigorous dMarried Men, or those who intend to marry, wpring, long life and the loy d before marriag | means, health, vigorous off- d be re ored 10 Vior & Estab, 1877, )‘\d«huaThe CIimax Medlcal Co, 504, St. Louis, Mo, RUEMPING & BOLTE, Manufacturers of Ornamental GALVANIZED IRON Dormer Windows, Window Caps, Metalic Sky Lights, &c. 016 8, h St., Omak GORNICES, FINIALY Tin, Iron Slate roofers, , Neb., Work done in any part of the country, Whiolesale assls the la will giv length « The full § Glothiers M. HELLMAN & CO, 1301 AND 1303 FARNAM STREET, COR, OMAELA 13TH, IEES. which v~ — = pie T IOWINE co B \\:’lfi;:v DEALERS IN . H fr' II's Safe and Lock Comp'y FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF OAFES, VAULTS, LOCKS, ETG. LOSO Farnam Siroet. Omahaa k | they could build walls and fo - | stock. A MEXTOAN HACIE INDA. Study of Mexican Rural Infe~Farm Managément—Vircual Slavery of the Peons—-Interest ing Dotails. Ootrespondsass New York San Diego (Cal, Post, In & recent journey throogh some agricaltural reglons of the neighboring republle, I gave no llttle attentlon to thelr farming mothods, Some of the haclendas or great farms of Mexico sar- paea the old-time ranchos of Californla asmuchas those surpass in size the lar- @est farms east of the Rocky Mountaias, Vast valleys, larger and richer than some of the finest of South. orn California, with frrigating dltches carrying more water than the ditches that supply the flourishing oolonfes of River- side and Anahelm, are often seen, In the ownership of a single person. Most of the land {s uncultivated, and the water la wasted upon the remalnder In the moat reckless manner. The comparative free- dom from taxation, the good prices ob- tained for produce, the ralsing of two crops a year and the cheapness of labor make these farms very profitable in snite of the miserable manner In which they are worked, and In eplte of the specala- tlons of the superintendents. The owner of the hacienda rarely lives upon It. He intrusts its care to a super- intendent whoao princlpal buelness Is to keep the peons In debt and not let them o ahead of the books, Though slavery fordebt is formally abolished by the con- stitutlon, it actually exists in many'places as firmly rooted as ever, and in trath fv seems Indipensible to the efiective man- agement of thess large farms, since tho laborer If freo can never be depended upon if he gets a few dollars, or even shilllngs, In his pocket, and there is a fiesta at which he can gamble within o hundred miles, These Immense ranches will bs to Mexico a source of weaknees In the fu- ture as In the past they have beena source of strength, Once thoy settled the country, because it would have been imposaible to induce settlers to go s) far into the wilderness unless suflicient land rere given them to snablo them to sup- port a emall srmy of retalners, so that ficationa ageinst Indians, bandits and revolation- ary parties, as also to guard tho llye A few hundred acres even of the richest land would In those days would have been useless to a sottler because pasturage of live stock was there, as In : | California, generally considered the only use that could be made of the greater part of the lands. But the future progress of the country they will retard, as the Mexican grants bave rotarded {he arowth of Calilornla, by delaylng those small holdings of 1and which will be nec. ’ | cssary to make Mexlco what sho can be. The haclenda ls a welcome tight on the Mexican landscape; eepeclally in the dry season, when the dry grass on long sweeps of shimmering plaln glve even the richest land 5o much the appearance of a desert, that it deceives nearly all travel- ers as much as California deceived Its first American settlers, Then the haclends, with its white walls and em- bowering trees shining afar upon the landscape, with its deep green fields of wheat or golden tracts of corn, through which scores of cotton-clad laborers are working, seems a veritablo oasls. Sometimes all the buildings are walled In with a lofty wall of adobe, concrete, or even stone, into which are driven st night all the cattle and horses snd nothing is left outs!de that is of any value. Many of these are perfect fortress, provided at the corners with Icop-holed towers, while some have a moat and deaw-brldge in the old-fash- loned style of Europe. There is a place for the owner and his family when they come out, also generally a chapel, apart- ments for the priest, superintendent of the ranch, etc., granarles, a store, corrals for the cattle and horaes, tanks of water and quarters for the people. Sometines all these are In central buildings, en. closed by the wall, and sgaln they may all be built in the form of a quadrangle opening on an lnner square, and pro- senting to the outer worid a tall, blank wall, broken only by a masslve dcor, which once closed, 1s rarely opened for anybody until morning. Some ha- clendas are very attractive, neatly bullt and whitewashed, with plenty of trees without and within the equare. Some have extenslve gardens whers frult trees and vineyards do much better than one would expect from anything planted in a heap In hard ground and never col- tivated. 1n others the bulldings are an Irregular pile of adobe, without order, symmetry, cr even conve. ce, and ut- terly destltute of anythingllke orna- ment. It {s evldent enough that the owner never lives in some of these. In many all the buildings are scattered about like a village, ouly the most important ones belng walled fn; the peons, who are generally poor enough to bo safe any- where, living outside, come haciendas having laborers by the Lundred, nearly every one with a famlly living upon the ranch in separato apartments, Many, perhaps most of these have been born upon the ranch and will die oponit. The happy children one sses tumbling about, or iazsoing dogs o pigs with thelr mother's clothes line, wiil probably be In debt before they are grown, and will llve and dle so, Yet it is 1s difficult to fay that they are not better off than If free. Almost without exception the Indisn blood predominates in the peons, and Is generally unmixed. They live upon a_plttance indeed, but it Is regular, and their famllies a1e not al- lowed to suffer by the father's Improvl- dence or gambling, as they would if he were free to go where he pleased. Nearly all the labor of the haclenda s done by the peons, the owner generally {ntrosting nearly everything to the super- {atendent, who, belng a gentleman like the owner, or at least deeming himeelf such, troubles himself little with any- thing resembling work, and perhaps even takes a little pride In knowing nothing about it. Hence the pzons not only do the plonghlog as they please, but make the plovghs, the heavy csrts, etc., In fact, make and repair all the tools and machioery, used on’ the ranch, They mako nearly everything without a forge or even bolts or ualls, the marvellous resonrces of rawhide belng equal 1o almost any emergency, lashing together the tcams and rafiers of the roof of a bigh house, hanging the chapel bell, mendiog the coach, uuwsteck, or anythiry, up to a hroken leg. Tho superintendent is ex-offic an alcalde, or justice of the peace; keeps the etore of the hacienda, at which the peons are pald in provistous, at fignres which fusvre their continuance in delt, attends to the shipment of produce, and often re the money for it. which he wan- y dlvides with the distant owuer, vzh he may keep the whole of it if the owner I8 in Earope. On the whole, hi life is often the mest easy and profitable in the world, —e e Purifying Water With Alum, Popular Science Nows, Those of our readers who have tray- eled on the Mississlppi tiver know how turbld the water is, aad they may have scen people tle & bit of alam to a thread, let it down Into & tumbler of water, and awing it about a little, after which opera- tlon the liquld became as clear as crystal. Rscently the matter has been carefully pum!l\ed into and reported upon by Professors P, T. Austen and F. A, \hlJnr‘ of Ratgers College. In the!r ex- perimente, two-tenths of a grain to the liter (one and one-fifth gralns to the gal- lon) caused the separation and settling of the impurliies in the New Brunswick, Now Jorsey water. Double this quan- tity May well be used, as a ralo, Thls amount of alum s too small to be per- ceptible to the taste, or to exert any physiologloal action, The alum may be used In olatifylng water by filteation. If a very small amonnt bs added to the turbid water, it can be fil- tered through ordinary paper without dlfficalty, and leaves a brilllantly clear filtrate, in which there I8 no trace of sus- pended matter, It is not necessaryto let 1t stand before filtration, as the action of the alum ls Immedlate. The simplest form of filter, for considerable quantities of water, is a tube, one end of which 1s stutfed with cotton, A draln pipe is the best, as it can be so easlly cleaned. The plug of cotton should be two or three inches thick, and may be keptin place bya rlng of wood which may be fitted into the bottom of the pipe. For household purposes, a large glass funnel may be usad or a filter may be made by catting off the bottom of a glass flask, or other bottle. The neck of the funnel or bottlo fs to bo plugged with cotton, which should first be worked In warm water to remove the adhering ale, and to wet It well. It should be packed in quite closely a littlo at a time nntil It forms'a layer two or three Inches thick. To iosare accaracy in the amount of alum used it is best to make a solution of half an ounce of alum to & quart of water. Dlssolve the alum In a cup of bolling water, pour this into & quart meas- ure, and fill ap with cold water, Keep in a properly labeled bottle. fifty-four drops of this solutlon, ora scani tea- epoonfal, will contaln two snd three: tenths gralns of alum, which Is the quantity for agallon of water. Itis not fmporiant to be very exact, as twlce the quantity would be harmless enough. An- alysla shows that the water {a not only clarified but purifizd by this process, the greatsr part of the organle matier being rewovea fecm it. —— Feeding Hay, Concerning the indefinito quactity of the hay ratlon in the most reputed feed- Ing experiments, it may bo cbrerved that feeding Is a matter that requires coneid- erable jadgmeut. Auimals, ltke mon, when the opportunity for exerclolng pre- ferencas Is presented, are apt to ccnsider that the beat only is good encugh for them; and, if more hay !s given them then they require, will pick out the ten- derest and sweetest pordons and leave tho remainder, which not only wastes valuable feed, but encourages the hablt of daintlners in the anlmals, which is conduclye to anything but thrift. Animals that pick over their food, smelllng and poking cvery ‘blade as to whether to eat or not do mot compare with thriftiness with the good, square eaters, whoso ap- potites givo thom a good rellsh for a roa— sonable quantity of any proper food. The goneral practice is to “feed enough,” which is correct enough when just suffi- cient Is given, and very Incorrect when great quantitles are glven to be tramped under foot or otherwise wasted. But with hay fn bulk it is not very essy to guage the quantitylgiven, and even if this wero possible, it would vary materfally with the quality of the prodact, although where good grain ratlons are given , vari- tlons In the quallty of hay are noMso im- portant. We remember once welghing ome hay that had been passed through a cutting machins, and that agreat blg plle of it uncat measured only a few bushel basketfuls after the machine had done with it, welghiog seven pounds and ahalf to the basket, or just half the welght of coarse wheat bran, welghed at the same time., It is not pozsible In the practical operation of the farm to be strictly accurate In such matters, but what ever departure there may be should be, 8o far as possible, controlled by cal- culation, and not left altogether to acci- dent. The farmer can not have a chem- 12al analysis made of hls bay to ascertaln 118 exact nutritive value, and he can not welgh out to esch bullock s0o many pounds and ounces; bat he can, consider- ing the quantity of graln he is fecding, and the average quantity of the hay, make up hls mind how many pounds ho should feed. If he does thls, and finds part of it wasted, he can decrease the quantity, and If the quantlty should be tneuflicient. his own practical observation will eoon dieclose that fact to him, Hav- ing made up his mind about how many peuttds to feed, he will bavo to guers end weigh & few times untll he can approxi- mate somowhat the deslred quantlty, azd will have a bseis or starting polnt from which to incraase or decrease his ration, Besides he ls pursulng & method, and there is nothing that contrlbutes so much toward sharpening onc's powers of ob- sorvation and ripening his experlence as a habit of dolog everything acccrding to eome fixed method or plan, ————— Need Money Well, it you need It ever so much, the best way is to work for it, And you can,t work to much advantage unless you bave good health, If you are dyspeptic or debilitated, or rheumatle, the best way to begin s to Invest a dollar In a bottle of Brown's Iron Bltters, which will en- rich your blood and drive out your all- ments, Health is better than wealth, Ray & Shoemaker, Drugglsts, Hannibal, Mo., say, ** ever #old an artlcle that gave as rood satisfaction as Brown's Iron Bltters,” e ——— Honorious, oue of the Roman emperore. shed tears at the loss of favorite hen, e e The Favorite Washing Compouud of the doy Is JAMES PYLE'S PEARLINE, It cleanses fabrics without injury, aud_without the laborious scrubbing necessary with ordi- nary goap, For sale by grocers, — Tt is eald that “out of every~ 10¢ #ohool teachiers seven marry every year. e lvum e ved by DUrry's Pune Mact pér Eottle, sold by Druggists — - The Hanging Mar Ilinois, Broominaron, Lil, July 21 - Abraham Denser, who yesterday burnad his house, and live stock to prevent bis wifs, who is now suing for a divoree from getting possession of any of his property, and who was supposed to have perishedin the fl wes, was subso quently found hiding in a clump of tall weeds and was lodged in the county jail. Daring the night beimprovised a rope from his sus LA nders, a towel and a piece of cord and hung imself in the cell, He was found dead this WOrDing . Arthur Dean, an employ in the Chicago & Alton shops, who has suffered at times from mental trouble, arrauged a noose from a cros beam in his barn and huog himself, He leaves a wife and several children, MAMMON'S MONOMANIACS, The Queer Habits of People Who Loso Their Wits 1n Pursnit of Money. Philadelphia Times, A wealthy Pennaylvan dled in Northampton county not long sgo. From dliferent parts of the honse, stutfod In stockings and ealt bags and stored in old coffee pots and tin fralt cans over §35,000 in gold and sllver and bank bills were taken by hls family and ac counted fot to the personwho was named tosettlenp tho estato, That this large sum of money was stored akout the house In that way seemed to be no secret elther to the famlly or any one else in the viclnlty, and its prosence In the house caneed no comment. A fow days ago a Burlington, Tows, drayman died and left property valued at £100,000, over which the helrs are even now quarrelling, Friends and refa- tives were ignorant of his wealth durlng lifetlme. No day passes hut what some hospltal, poor-house or tenement tells {ta story of men and women who have drag- ged out an existence amidst filth and rags whilo in poesosslon of verltablo fortunes. The story of these monomaniacs is by no means uninteresting. The case of M. Osterwald, who dled at Parie, le remarkable as showing that the richest man in a clty may also be the most miserable one. He was the ron of a poor minister and began lifc as as & clerk In a banking house at Hamburg, which he augmented by his speculations In business and his economical mode of living. He afterward camo to Parls, where he accumulated hls enoamous for- tune. He was a bachelor, the expenses of a wife and children being Incompatible with his frugal mode of living, He had for a servant a poor wretch, whom he never permitted to onter his apartment; ho had always promisad that at his death he should be handsomely recompensed, and accordingly he loft him a plttance slx months' wages and a suit of clothes, bat as he expressly atated, “‘not the most new.” A few days before his danth zome of hls acqualntanzes wko saw that ha was reduced to his last extromity by want of proper nourfshment, proposed to have him some sonp. **Yes, yes,” he replled, “'it Ia easy to talk of soup, bt what Is to become of the meat?” Thus dled one who was reported to b the rich- ert man in Parls, more from want of care and proper nourishment than from dis- eaze. Mo is stated to have left relations whom he had probably nover eeen, the sum of 15,000,000 francs. Under hls bolster was 10,000 francs In papermoney. A mieer dled in Paris, in 1880, leaving property supposed to be worth about 0. Some time elapscd beforo the heir presented himself, but on his doing 80 a search was made in the. miser’s apartment, and no less o sum than $190,- 000 was discovered in a cupboard. The cases of these Frenca misers strik- ingly illnstrate the truth of the following lines: To heirs unknown descends the unguarded store, Or wanders heaven-directed to the poor, In a recent care—that of Winslow Rhodes, known as the Hounslow miser— two charitles benmefitted largely by the misor’s hoardings, He died worth nearly £400,000, all of which ke left to the Royal Free Hospltal, and the Lifeboat Institotion. The mlser’s nephews and nloces trled to upset the wili, but 1t was upheld, the two charities consenting to pay 1,000 guiness to the next of kin, It 1s sald that the mlser commenced his savings by plcking up cigar ends and oth- es unconsldered triflas, His household effects sold for $21).25. In 1877 there died at Woolwich a Mr. John Clark, aged 86, He was described as having been a man of educatlon, but a vary singular character; although reputed as immensely wealthy, he was very miserly In his habits, and lived to the last in a equalid hovel in the poorest part of Woolw:ch. The greater portion of his llfe was spent in the accumulation of books, of which he left a large store, 1t was reported that the front shutters of his house had not been opened for thirty years; he never took a regular meal nor did he know the taste of wines or splrits. Yet, notwithstanding that he llved in such a den and suffered such privations, he reached an octogenerlan age, and dled worth $200,000 or thereabouts. This book- worm, as well as miser, seems to have been a strange combination of avarlce and Iiberality, for by his will he left no less than $30,000 to his doctor; als> $25,00 to his houeekeoper, besldes many legacles to local charitles and to a number of poor nelghbors by whom he was surrounded. Knowing well he cou!d not take hls wealth with bim, he appears to have tried to make somo preparations for a wasted life by dlsposlng of hls tressures by a ltberal hand. What his next of kin said about the $30,000 to the doctor is not recorded. Bequests of this nature are a prolific source of litigation. Sir Thomas Colby, an official high in office, shortened his exlatenca by his pas- slon for this world's goods, as appears by the followlng anecdote: **He ross in the middle of the night, when he was ina very profuse persplration, and walked down stalza to look for the key of his cel- lar, which he had inadvertently left on a table In the parlor; be was -pprehennlvn that his servant’s might selza the key and rob him of a bottle of port wine, Instead of wnich he hlmeelf was selzed with a chill, and dled intestate, leavirg £200,- 000 in funds, which was thared by five or six day laborers, who were his next of kln.” Some yesrs agoa chiffonnler (orrag and refaee gatherer) died intestate in France, having literally “scraped” together 400, 000 france, the whole of which went to the helr at law, — Clara Morris uses Fozzonl's Powder, Clara Loulsa Kellogg does likewlse, — ‘Watermelons Won't Go, ‘“‘There |s as handsome a lot of water— melons as ever reached New York,” sald & Washington market dealer to a San re- porter, ‘‘and yet people shun them as it they were afrald they would go off. Where I sold a thoueand last season I do not eell one hundred.” ““How do you account for it?” “That's an easy one. Why, cholera, cholera, cholera! The health board have ecared the frult coneumers to death, and, in place of breakfasting on & good ripe watermelon or dish of other frult, they are now dieting on oatmeal, crackers, rice, or hominy. Nothing green not a ehade of that color on the table. Now, watermelons are notorlously wholesome,” “How do the prices compare with laat eeason’’ “There s a handsome melon for 20 cente; 50 and 60 cents was a common price a year ago,’ “Many melons coming +Yes, but they will not psy expenses We won't bave the cholera, but we have got the scare, and the melon business le lad out,” Dutch farmer ° — Man wants but little here below, We- man wants Pozzonl's Complexion Fow- der, RealEstate Bedtord & Souer 213 South 14th Street, Have a large list ofjinside business and resi- dence property, and some of the finest suburban property in and around the city. We have business property on Capitol Avenue, Dodge, Douglas, Farnam, Harney, Howard, 16th sreets, 9th, 10th, 13th and We have fine residence property on Farnam, Douglas, Dodge, Davenport, Chicago, Cass, California streets, Sher- man, §t Marys end Park Avenues, in fact on all the best residence streets, ditions. Hawthorne- Millard& Caldwell’s Lakes, Elizabeth Place’ E. V.Smith’s, Horbach'’s,] Patrick’s, Parker’s, Shinn’s, Gise’s, Nelson's, Armstrone’s! Godfrev’s,! Lowe's, . Kirkwood, Coliege Place:: Park Place, Walnut:Hill, West End, Borgs & Hill! Capitol, Reed’s First, We have property in the following ad- McCormick’s, Kountz & Ruth's, Impr'nt Association Wilecox, Burr Oak, Isaac & Seldon's Hanscom’s West Omaha, Grand View, Credit Foncier, Kountz’ First Kountz’ Second, Kountz’ Third, Kountz’ Fourth, Svndicate Hill, Plainview, Hill Side, Tukev & Kevsors Thornburg, ’ Clark Place, Mvers & Richards. T Bovds,’ And a! the other Additions to the City.- South Omaha. ‘We nave the agency fo tne syndicate lands in South Omaha. These lots sell from $225 upwards, and are very desirable property. The development of the packiag house and other interests there, are rapidly building up that portion of the city. Kirkwood. We have a few lots left in Kirkwood addition, which we offerat low prices, terms $25 down balance $10 per month, level ground and are desirable. Tln-w lots are on high Hawthorne.l This addition is more centrally located than any other new addition near the best Schools in the city. All the streets are being put to grade the grades have peen established by the city council, and is very desira- ble residence property, only 158 blocks from Post ulhw prices lower than adjoining additions for a home or investment. beaten. For Sare—House and lot on 21st St, Easy torms, For SaLe—22 feet on Farnam St., near 11th St., $5,000, ¥or Sark—Lot inWalnut hill, 8200, Fon Saue—Lots on 30th, $560 each, Fon SaLE—22 aores with elegant residence, good barn, fine tres, shrubery, fruit, hot and cold water and all conveniences; first class property in every respect. Fou SALE- 66 feet on Farnam street, near Good businesa property cheap. For Rent—Room 44x76, 3d floor, on 14th 18th, treot, These lots cannot be For Sate—~House and lot, 25th and Chioa go streat; splendid corner, $3,600, FoR SALE ~ First class business block, 845, For Sate—} lot on Wheaton St.; goo house, 81,500, Fox SaLk—Fine corner lot in Shinn s addl tion, $750, Fon SaLe—Lot in Millard Place, specia bargain. Fon I eAsk—Fine business property on 16th St and St Mary's Avenue. ok Savk—h lot on_Chicago St., between 15th and 14, with good house, £3,000, We will furnish conveyance free to any partof the city toshow property to our friends and customers, and cheervfully give informa- tion regarding Omaha Property. Those who have bargains‘to offer or wnuh property atla’bargaingare invited to see us, BEDFORD & SOUER Real ZEstate Agents 238, 14thSt. bet..Farnam &Douglas