Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 31, 1885, Page 2

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THE DAILY BEE- FRIDAY, JULY 31, 1885. BEST TONIC This medicine combines Tron with pure vogetab’s onics, and_in o for Dj amen, and riches and {e Appetite, Stre eFveR—in fact, t produce constipation Mps, Kpizanern 1 kea, Wis.. eass. un. T Tinwe tised Tirowsn's I my complerion is cloar and ficial to my children.’ ino, o wtamp, given away by all doal it of 2 mailed to any address on rece TR ANTNY PERATING CKEST SELLL ANl (1< "ERPOCT CORING STove %1 & wunderta rated Medieal CLARKE, M. D, CAGO, ILL. E.CZEMA. For fhe berefit of cullering humanity, I deem 1t only my duty to give this unsolicited tostimony in favor . { Swiit's Specite. My wife hs been ufflicted infancy.” We tried evory kuown vail. Sho was alfo sfllicted with: ical nervous headache, sometimen followed Dby aninfermittant fever, so that her life became a burden to her. Finally I'determined to try Switt's Sperifio She o-mmenced seven weeks ago. Aftor taking the first large bottlo the e seomed to Increase; the burning, itching and inflwuation be- came unbearable. She, ho vever, peroucred in the use of themedictne. After takinis the sccond bottle ho inflamation bozan to subside. — Aftor the third bottle the inflamation disappearcd, and soro spots {iried up and tnrs ed whits aud scaly’ and flaally sho brushed thim oft in an impalpable white powder resembling pure sa't. She is now taking tho sixth bottle; every appearaeca of the disease 13 gone, and her flesh Is soft and whit as & child’s. Her head- aches bave disappearcd and sho onjoys the only good health sho has known in 40 years, No wondor ehe deems every bottle of . 8. S, is worth & thou- #and tlmes ity weight In gold *~ Any fur her information c'ncerning her caso will be choerfully given by heiself at hor residoace, 185 Muliett Streot, or by me. J,HN F. BRADLEY, 48 Grlawold 8t. ngis R LHE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO. QLW N Y .., 167 St. Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga, Carne i) forme PRIVATY, il Erutia J THE BEST THInG vuT FOR Washing & Bleaching In Hard or Soft, Hot or Cold Water, Bavrs Lavow, Tivw and’ SoAr Amazinony, and glves unlversaleatistaction. No family rich or poor should be without It. grocers. BrwARE of imitations well . PRAR s the OXLY sAY 1 eaving compound aud always boars tho above & bel and name ot JAMES PYLE NEW YORK. AFINE LINE & Plins &0t WCODBRIDGE A0S, THE ONLY EXOLUBIVE MUSIE AOUSE IN OMAHA NEB. DREXEL & MAUL, Svcoesgons 10 Joun G, Jacons, UNDERTAKERS | At the old s'and 1417 Farnaw 8t Geders by tele- waph Sol citod aud prowptly attcaded fo. Telephona 0.22. PROPOJALS FOR MARKET HOUSE CONSTRUCTION, als will be recived by the w. of Tuesday, Au house in ac n tle i the Sealed prop: gned until 8 v'clock p. rtified chosk in the ars, payable Lo the { faich, The to wgject ) be accompani suni of two hundred and fifty d, city of Omaha, & av evidence of Doard of publi¢ works reserves the any or all bids, 1. E Housk Jy2nwdow Chun, Board of Public Works, CAPITALS OF MEXICO, Citles Whose Foundation Dates Back | {to a Period Preceding the Discov- . ory of America—Their Distin guishing Characteristics- Places Made Famous by Historical Incidents —What the Oen L Shows, The Two Republics, Agnas Oalientes, the capital of ahe state of the same name, bas & population of 59,000, The name translated means Hot Springs, and Is derived from a spring of thermal water which rises in its viclnity. Many Americans employed on the Mexi- Central rallroad and elsewhere live there, Oampeche, capital of the state of the same name, I8 an old fortlfied Spanish town, with & present population of some 12,000 people. For many years it was the only port cf the Yacatan paninsula, and infested by smugglers and fillbusters. Saltillo, capital of Coahulla, was founded In 1586, and created a clty on Noy. b, 1827, with the name of Leona Vicario, a herolne of the Mexlcon revo- lation, Ssn Crlstobal was named In honor of the good old St. Christopher, who is said to have carrled Christ across a stream in the shape of a little child. San Cristo- bal is the capital of the most southern state of the Mexican republic, Chiapas. 1t has some 8,000 Inhabitants. Chihuahua, capltal of the siate of the state of the same name, in Northern Mexico, lles on the foothllls of the Slerra Madre range. The old college of the Jesults Is there, under whose walls Miguel Hidalgo and Capt. Allende, the revolutionary leaders, were executed. An aqueduct 20,000 foet long carrles water to the center of the city. The present population fs about 20,000. Colima, capltal of the state of the same name, 18 situated on the river of the same name. Itlsa place of 30,000 inhabit- auts, It has a large trade In cocoa, coffee, pearls and tllmas, or Mexlcan cloaks, After the conquest elxty Span- iards eetiled here, and intermarried. Durango, capltal of Darango, has 22,- 080 Inhabitants, aslde from the scorplons for which {t is famous. Guanajuato, capital of Guanajuato, is a great mining city. It 1s located 282 miles porthwest of the Clty of Mexico, in a canyon, and has a population of 73,- 500, Chilpanclngo, capital of the state of Guerrego, has 3 300 Inbabltants. 1t 1s celobrated fn Mexican history for being the town where the first Mexican congress met after the cry for ltberty had chased the Mexican people to rebel agalnat Span- ish rule. Pachuca, capltal of the state of Hidal- g0, has 17,000 inhabitants. It ls theseat of the Real del Monto minlng company, the largest like corporation In Mexico, and one of the largest In America, Guadalajara s the capital of the state of Jalisco, It has a population of G4.. 500 peopie, and ls'the third city in the republic In polnt of population and weslth, Toluca, capital of the state of Mexlco, Is & place of 13,600 poople. It 1s the highest inhabited lanad in the repuablic, 8,638 feet ahove the sea level. Morella, capital of Michoacan, 26,000 Inhabitants, Cuernavaca, capltal of the state of Morelos, was founded by the Tiahuicas, an auncient tribe of Indians, in the four- teenth century. It was incorporated to the Aztec crown of Mexico by Itzcoat, In 1432, was conquered by the Spantards fn April, 1521, and declared a city October 14, 1634. The Indlan name was Qaan- huahuac, “Near Beautiful Hills.” It contains Cortez’ palace, and Is a place of 9,700 people. Monterey Is the caplta! of Nuevo Lecn. It is ® growlng clty, and has now nearly 50,000 wnhabitants, Thirty yesrs after has the conqueet of Mexico by the Spaniards, the celebrated Spanish general, Francisco de Urdlnola, conquered the Chichimeca Indians, who held the place. In 1656 Don Diego de Montemayor founded the metropolis of Our Lady of Monterey. Oaxaca, cap!tal of the state of the same name, was tounded In a beautiful valley by Jusn Mendez del Mercado in 1628, Its populatlon is 26,500, Puebla, capital ot the state of the same name, has 78,000 inhabltants. 1t fa sur- rounded by three river. It has saventy churches, The city has large cotton and thread factories and marble-cutting estab- lishments. The Tecall or Puebla marble has a world-wide fame. A railrord con- nects Puebla wiah the City of Mexico and Vera Craz. The city was founded in 1631, (Qaeretaro Is the capital of the state of the same name. It was founded In 1445 by an Otoml! colony, which came from a wilderness now the United States, The Spanfsh caclque, Ferando do Tapta, conquered 1t in July, 1531, naming it Santiago de (Queretaro, ashe claimed that Santlago (St. James) fought in tha air in his favor agaiost the Indlane. It has now 27,660 people, and is a manufactur- ing oity. San Luls Potosl s the capltal of the state of the same rame. It was founded by a Franciscan monk, Diego de le Mag- dalena, and {n 1655 was daclared a city. Its population 1s 56,800, It {s considsred a clty of immense wealth, Cullcan is the capital of the atate of the state of Sinaloa, It was founded in 1522 by Nuno de Guzman, but wass town of soma Importance when {he Az- tecs left Aztlan in the thirteenth century to invade the valley of Mexlco, It has now 4,905 in habltants, Ures is the capltal of Sonora, and has 8,000 f{nhabltante. It was formerly missionary statlon, San Juan Baptlsta, capital of the state of Tabasco, was founded March 30, 1519, near the site of the present olty, The old capltal was depcpulated during the fraquent invaslons of the Indlans, Its populatlon is 6,234 Ciudad Victorla 1s the capltal of Ta- maullpas. It was founded on October 6, 1760, and its present population 1s 6,500, The clty has been desolated for forty years by the clvil wars, and even the cemetery Is surrounded by a high wall provided with port-holes. ~ It Is a deso- ate, dreary place. Tlaxcals, capital of the state of the eame name, wes founded In the fift:enth century by Calhuatepanecatl, an ladisn warrior, and for two centuries was capital of the axcslan republic, rival to the Mexican empire, The Spaniards oceu pled It on Sept. 28, 1619, as its ailies. 1t hay now £,350 Inhabitants, Jalapa, the new capltal of the sta'e of Vera Cruz, s the garden cily of Mexioo, the paradlss of the American contirent. It has some 12,000 Inhabllante. Merlda, capital of Yucatan, was possi- bly the oldest inhabited olty in Americs when the Soanfards made it a clty on an. 6, 1542, It has a popalation of 40,000, Zacatecas Is the capital of the slate of the same name It is a famous minlny canter, the first mine being loosted b Jaan de Toloea in 1646, Phillp IT of 8paln made It a city on April 17, 1085 1t has & 29,782 inhabitants, L Paz,capltal of the terrltory of Low- er Oalifornia, has 4 000 inhabitant It was made a clty on October 28, 1720. Teple, capital of the new territory of Tepic, is twenty-five miles from the port of San Blas, and has some 9,000 Inhab- {tants, Mexico Clty, capital of the feneral dis- telot and oapital of the repablic, was founded on June 18, 1527, by Tenoch Aatzln, Acacltli Aheaxotl, Ocolopan, and their associates, In 1530 it was granted borough privileges, head of Castile, and in 1649 obtalned the title of ‘‘very no ble, notable and logal,” 1t has a popu- 1atlon, according to IRamon Fernandez, ex-.governor of the federal district of 350,000 souls, P — Tho Wealth of Vance bilt, Mr. Vanderbllt is said to bs worth three times his welght ingold. Gold is a very preclous metal, but iron Is more 8o, Gold cannot enrich the blood, but iron can, Gold cannot enter Into the human clrcalation, but lron fs the thing which gives our blood-corpuscles thele rioh color. A man without fron In his blood would be no man_at all. The prepai tlon of fron, which fs the principle Ingre- dient in Brown'n Iron Bltters, is the only one which can be taken without Injary. Ita strengthening work a perfect. o — EXPRESS SERVIOE, The Method by Which Millions Are Handled Daily With Safety—The Ends of the Earth KEncom- pased, Pittaburg Dispatch, A man entered the office of the Adams Express Company yetterday, and placing asmall package on the counter, said: *‘I want to eend this to Auckland, New Z:aland, When can it go?" Without hesitation the clerk anawered him and gave a recelpt for the package —which contalned money—saying, *I will forward it on the Philadelphia mail to-night.” Carlous to know how an ex- press company could thus control deliv- ery at such a dlstant point, the reporter sought out Mr. W, H. Glenn, the super- intendent of the company’s business in Pivtsburg, and lesrned the following facts in regard to the express business: “Yes, sir, that 1s a common occurrence here. We have packages come in here for all parts of the world, and we give a receipt for them, no matter where thelr destlnation may be, and we forward them by the most direct route, and have never yet failed to make a delivery. In one case, which happened when I was In the eastern part of the country, a man came to me and sald he wished to ship a bible to a mlssionary frlend In South Afrlea, Wo took the packege and forwarded it. Some weeks after he called to know if it had been delivered, and we sent out a ‘tracer.’ We bogan by ocaliing up the various offices through which it passea after it left us, and finally traced ft to our agents at Cspe Town, in South Afrlca. After two months he wrote the home office that he sent the package out only to find that the consigneo had been murdered by the savages, and his mutl- lated body was all they found. Did they dellver tho book! ~ Why, of course they did; and when the remafns of the mis- sionary wers brought home and the cise opened, the firat thing that met the sight of the bereaved relatives in the case was a package bearing the legsnd, ‘Adams Expreas office, New York, U. S. A.’ “We will forward that package you just eaw delivered to San Franclsco, Cal., and there our agent will way blil it to the agent at Auckland, Naw Z:aland, and in due time it will arrlve there by P. M. S. S. Company’s steamer, just as surely as it would go th Eist Liberty. Lost on the road? No. If cur employes attend to thelr instructions t can not bs lost, only through shipwreck, and then, if insured, we make good the loss, “‘I entered the servics of this co>mpany over thirty years ago, when stage ccaches were fn common use and frequently robbed. I had a bag of gold dust to take from a northern town into Elmira, and I put the dust into a bottle and placed it n my outside coat ocket in plain sight. I filled the bag with iron filllogs st the will, and my friend and myself lsughed at an imaglnary robber finding a bag full of iron filllngs, We wera not on the road an hour when three men rode up from behind and cleaned us out, particolarly taking_my bottle and overlooking the bag. The company made good the lost gold dust, and 1 never tried since to fool arobber. I think my quondam friend helped to work the game. “We oarry mllllons of money for the government, and have never lost a penny except in case of wreck and fire, and then it was known what money was burned, and it was easlly replaced. The other day we took £8,000,000 from Washington in"one lot and travsported 1t to Sam Francisco, Cal , and of couras had no more trouble than If It was $1,000, *‘We operate eome 38,000 miles of road In this country and Cansda, and ten tlmes that awount throughout the world, and the parcentago of loss on goods in traneit, or total loes, has bsen goods of thoss who were to ocsnpy them when ballt. The only time I ever knew the company's men to be knocked out was when tome fellow shippsd a Me. phitts Americana on one of eur cars in New Hampshire. This animal had been caught and cbloroformed, and as the train rattled on it came to, and shortly after the car was vacated and all hands were found lying on the roof gasping for alr, The station people who were about to attack us for having bronght sickness among them, and we had a great time before we could make them understand the case, The car and contents were sidetracked and burned, and we mnever knew who played us the trick.” | — GRANI'S MISSOURI HOMES, Whitehaven Where ho Went Oourt- ing and Hardscrabble Which He Built, St. Louis Republican, Tho history of the different houses connected with Grant's stay In St. Louls is soon told. Some twelve miles south ot the clty Is the old Dent farm, on which Whitehaven and Hardscrabble stand, Whitehaven is the old family home of the Dents. The house Is over half a ceatary old, and it is yet, despite its age, & hand. some structure. [t {s here that Brevet Second Lieut. Grant came courting Miss Julla Dent, the sister of his old school- mate, riding over from the barracks, only four miles away. 1t was in White. haven that most of Grant's children were born, and the tenderest assoclations of his life are assoclated with it. Hardscrabble got its pecullar name from Geant himself, He christened it after he had built it. Not many of our cltles can show In thelr enyirons a log house bullt by a president of the United States. Old Mr. Dent, after Grant had left the arwy, presented his son-in-law with sixty acros of land, and the future general at once et to work to bulld a home upon it for his family, He was very poor—so poor that Fred Dent had to lend hlm the money to buy the floor- ing, window sash and doorways of his house. According to the gocd old cus- tom, when the logs were shaped and ready, the nelghbors gathered in to help *‘raise” the house. It is alocal tradition thet Gen. Grant with his own hands ¢id all the work upon the s utheast corner of the house, Judge John F. Long carried up one of the corners, The houto Ia a comtortable one, well bullt and commo- dlous. It has old-fashioned fireplaces, whore many a giant log has barned to ashes In the good old times before the war. Itisa two story house, and the arrangement of the rooms testifies to the fact that Graut was a good architect as woll 8 & gr0d soldier. The houee on Fiith and Corra streets, on the southest corner, was in its time a fino residence. It still bears traces cf the style and fashion of Its former ocau- pante, but it has fallen from its high es- tate, aud it is now a boarding house, which advertizes the dsy board tobe found within, The house on Seventh snd Barton sticots was for a time Grant’s property. When he moved into St. Louis to go into the real estate business he traded Hard- scrabble for the Barton street property. Taere was a flaw In the tltle, however, and the property was taken away from him. It wasnot till after the war that he recovered poesession of Hardscrabble. The house is a frame, full of surprising doorways and unexpected atalrs, I;is a little bit of a cottage. ——— The Favorite Washing Compound of the day is unguestionably JAMIES PYLE'S PEARLINE. It dispenses with the necossi ty for teating or rubbing the clothes, and does not iujure the fubric, RED STAR N TRADE \ aen/ MARK oucH@UurE 1hsolutely Free from Opiates, Emetics and Poisons TUE CHARLES A, YOGELET CONPANY, Haltlmore, ary iand, ¥, 0, & DOCTOR WHITTIE 17 St Uhuaries 5. R0 Lwiis, Nervous Prosuatior nysical Weakness uns of Throat, Skir o d Sures and Ulcers I ¢85 Dl b . A Positive Written Buarante: n, £1 4 ADOVA 1 mans Jamas Yodieal Inctituto 7 1 Chartered by theStateof Llli- Binois for the express parpose of giving imme: e relietin c, urinary and pri- . Gonorrheea, 1l their compi also all ses of the S y rem oty Years minal , Pimples on 77 Icines sent by Ma package o indicate contents or . Address DR.JAMES,No. 204Washinglon St.,Chicago, Il T R L e e R T S ST D Manhood Restored REMEDY e —Avictim of youthful impradence eausing Promal Lost B "GONSUMPTION, L havo a positive ronedsy for tho above discase; by its uso 1 i sol o w ind and of Tong ared. Tdend: NEW ENGL GONSERVATORY, rmation. address, uklin 8., BOSTON, Mads. — Secretary Endicott's Old Oollege Mate, New York Car. Chicago Inter-O:ean, When Willlam C. Eadicott, secretary of war, wrote his name in the registry of a New York hotel one day last wesk, and turaed to follow the hell boy to the ele- vator, there stood In his way a man whose face had been handsome before ram bleared it, and whose clothes were the worn-out remnants of a fashionable sult, but whoee big figure retalned a port which made him still imposing. He ex- tended his hand and sald: ‘““How are you, jadge?” with an assurance and heartiness which made repulze all but impossible, The detcctlve on duty in the corrldor stepped hastlly forward, took the bum- mer by the arm, and told him that he must not nnoy the gusst. “‘What?” the chap exclalmed indlg- nantly, *1 annoy Judge Endicott? Why, he and I were college chums,'” Secretary Endicott chatted a minute with his old scqusintance, got away from him without resorting to a rough process and afterward sald: *‘You are right in surmlsiog that ho wanted anappointment to office, and that he based his request on the ground of our collega relationship He was nearly foremost in my class; hts famlily had wealth and respectability with which to help blm forward, and there seemed to be no reason why he shouldn’c distinguish himself in Jife. For ten for many years almost nothing. Thero are fally 15,000 men {n our employ, in- cluding all, from platform men to aupr- latendent, and we have the strictest kind of civil service rules, every man being promoted in the order of his seniority without regard to influence, and obtain- ing promotfon in no other way. This is one reason why the express sarvice is #0 efticlent, for no man can enter It on any other man’s recommsndation and overstep another who has already served and ls capacitsted. We run 10,000 horses and 8,000 wagons of all a'yles, and make s speclalty of raising horses peculiarly fitted for oue service. There is probably no private corporation in ex- istence in which the detallfs so thorough. ly arranged as oure, and in which a loss or delay can be so readily traced. A fea ture In our history which proves this is the total freedom from embezzlement and defalcation among our employes, which is accounted for by the simple fact that they can not go far without detec- tlon, aud all trusted employee are under an approved bond, which {s always re- spousible, ‘At any one moment of the day or night our compsny has milllons of dol- lars’ worth of merchandise and valusbles in transit, and each morning with the regularlty of clock-work, we are ateured of safe delivery and the ceasing of re- sponsibillty by the compan, The great utility of express eerv!ce was shown while the reporter was In the uffice by s young man entering, rolliog au enormoas bicyols befure him, which was booked and taken to the samo train that carrled him {nto the country, and delivered at bis hote! in good order, for a pries that seemed ridlon'ous when com- pared with the service rendered, *'We carry cats, doge, wutes, and fre- quenily valaable raclug s'0zk, We have taken lunatics and convlets and any num- ber of babies, In fact our meesengers ara broken In oan a mill: bottle, and can denca a baby just like & real woman, Stugular as 1t mas seem we 2ary whols cltice, too, haviog sent three train loads of ready made houses to a point in Texar, snd followed them with the wordlyl years I bave not ssen or heard of him. Ho seems to have wrecked himself. Sup- pose now that he had eent to me a writ- ten petition, signed by numerous reput- able persone, aud reminding me «f my former knowledge concerning his abilities —{en’t 1t easlly conceivable that I might {nnocently and properly have placed him in Government employ! Ah! good character at the beginuing of a decade I8 too often all gone at the end,” e — e MALARIA prevented and thoroughly eradicated by Durry's Pune Maut WHISKkY, $1.25 per bottle, sold by Druggists and Grocers, Mr. Farquaharion, one of the joint man- agers of the Dublin brauch of the broken Munster bank, is missivg with $350,000 of the bank's funds, e —— Street Oars in Scotland, In mauy towns of Scot'and where sirest rallways are In operatlon, Instead of chargi ® withoat regard to the di assenger travels, the route is laid off Into districts, When a man gets on a car he pays one penny, which takes him to the end of that dis- trict; then the condustor collects an- other penny, and continues at cach new dlstrict until the terminus of the line is reached. By thls means the passenger only pays for the distance ho rides, and is thuy encouraged to enter the ocars when he has but 8 short distance to go, S Hon, O, B, Stewart, sged 51, cna of the surviviog signera of 1hs declaration of in- dependencs of Texas, died at Montgomery, Texss, yostorday. e — Whea Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria, Whea shie was a Child, she cried for Castoria, When Phan sbie iad Children, she gavethism Castoria @ became Miss, aho clung to Castoria, 8. H. ATWO0O0D, Plattsmouth, Neb. Bree 1 of thoroughbred and high grade Herelo d and Jerssy Cattle, And Doroe and Jersey Red Swina, LOOSE’S EXTRACT RED CLOVER _PBLOSSOM The Great Blood Purifier. Cancers, Huyons, NG, Tudons, A 300D POISONY CATARRH, SALT RuEUM, ERySIPELAS, LHEU- MaTisM, avd all blood and skin disoases, PRICE £1 PER PINT BOTTL 00SE'S RED CLOVER PILLS, Cura 4 ache, Dyspepsta, Indigestion, ‘snd Hoxos of %6 pills 26 cents; b boxes §1. RENEDY, sure ocure, b0 ggists, oF address , ULckns, SwELL- ck Head. onstipation. 0OSK'S RKD Eapeoially in cholers infantam 1a the use of Rldges Feod invaluable. Many casss could by cited whera there need be yerylittlo trouble from bowel com plalnts; and co this that I ascribe the facs that I have never yet lo:t & co)ld with ay form cf diarthea or cholera i1 fantum " BIT An exeellcat appetelng leat apyesling NEW VORK. urce Wree i Nertous (e W cakne Debliily e’ Muuhiood i Decay AGror LS8 iAcript ) Drig all i UK, WARD & &1 A BEAUTIFUL TOWN EGANTLY 1 OCATED. 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 beet 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- ploynuent there a year hence. This offers great inducements to lJaboring men to secure homes now while they are cheap. Specula- tors will ulso find it to their advantage to buy at present prices. The company have made no change from the original prices, but some parties who first purchased lots have resold them 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 favore ed with a first class cattle market, fortunes have been made by investors in real estate, and the same is certain to follow in South Omaha. While the whole city of Omaha will be greatly benefitted by the growth and development of the cattle interest, South Omaha lots will enhance in value more ra- pidly than any other by reason of the prox imity to the works. MANUFACTURERS. Manufacturers of all kinds w'll find itto their advantage to inspect this property; good location, level grounds, track tacilities 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 heuce 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 chargey of, and are the exclusive agents for the sale of all this" property from @ streetssouth, BSplendid lots from $225 upwards, BEDFORD & SOUER 203 S. [4th STREET, We have desirable business and residence” property 7fcr] sale intall parts of Omaha and do a general real estate business, We olicit bny- ers and sellers to call on us, We will give thetn all possibla information free, and keep conveyauce fres"to show propertyjin any part of the city, Bedford & Souer,

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