Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 3, 1885, Page 7

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THE DAILY BEE---MONDAY, AUGUST 3 1885. 7 One of he Best and Lnrg NO STAIRS TO CLIMB. THE CHEAPEST PLACE IN OMAHA TO BUY ol ol DEWEY & STONE o3t dtocks in the United Btater elect From. ELEGANT PASSENGER ELEVATOR 1 MEN of alla and vitality, nerye EX Athome with ot spring, long 11fe and the loveand res hood hefore marriage rmun 7.)Addre: sti MY?TLEAIN‘ Vurru‘tl Men, or those who mlrmi 1o marry, Uil vigor and power, wna are NS )SSES, who are weak. who find their POWER weakened . by oive nptwlflt’l\ and lasting ing Ui Ak may be, F Wi s od_the celebrated 1EN gfi?; TS ry. Bilier symploms leading mptly renioved by tiis treatment, and vigorous vigorous off- lered 55" Viro & strength means Ak menslionld b s and valnable tr he Climax Medical Co, 504, St. Louis, Mo, OUNCIL BLUFFS | ARPET_GOMPANY CALPETS, Curtains, Qil Cloths, Window Shades, Linoleums, Mattings, OPHOLSTERY G00DS Rugs, Ete., Etc. Careful Attention Glven to O of Town Orders. Uplolstery and Drapery Work a|with its level banks and the furcher Iowa Swecialty. Our stock I8 the Larogst in the West) and is being contlnually replenished by all tho latest and choicest novelties. 405 Broadway Council Bufis J. L. DuBEVUISE, Onion Ticket Agent, No. 607 Broadway Ounnull Blnll. Rallwa.y Time Ta.ble OOUNOIL BLUFFS, The tollowing aro the timos of the arrival and de- | gauntered out to view the beantles of the the win arkuto of Arain ocal dopote. ates earilor e DBPART, by oontral standard time, wvo transfer dopod be b o itusos ARRIVE, (4110400 and RORTHWRATERN, 0:25 A M Mail and Expross 60 r 12:40 ¥ M Accommodation 410 ¢ 580 ¥ N Expross 9:06 & €B10A00 AND ROOK ISLAND, 9:25 A M 3ail and Express 6:58 ¢ 7:2 A M ccommodation BiL6 ¢ 530 ¥ X B 9:00 A 0310460, WLWAUREE ARD 87, PAUL, 9:20 A M Ma'l and Express 0:50 625 ¢ M Exprest 9:05 CTIGAGO, WIKLINGTON AND QUINOT, 9:60 A Ml and Exprosa 7 3 Ao ¢ odation 2:00 ¥, M 45 v PR Bi60A WATALI, BT. LOUIS AND PAOITIO, 9:15 ¥ x Local 8t Louls Express Local | —— 800 ¥ X Transior W Transter 8:20 7 RAXS48 CITY, OT. JOB AND COUNCLL BLUFYD, 10,08 A M Mail and Expreos 6:40 ¢ 816 ¥ ¥ Express 0:26 A 4I0UX OITY AND PACIFIO, 720 A M Mail tor Sloux City 6:50 ¥ M 780 ¥ ¥ Express for 8¢ Paul 9:26 & M UNION PAGIFIC. 11 Deonver Kxpress Lincoln Pass 0'a &R V Ovorland #xprees DUMMY THALNS TO OMANA, 3 mm Council | Hiufty 114 1:80 NOLL'S PORI‘ABLE Pneumatic Beer [Fancet PATENTED IN EVERY CIVILIZED COUNTRY, A liberal discount Price $18.00. will be made to pirties ordering a half dozen Faucets at one time, For further particulars inquire of R F. RAIN, (Couneil Bluffs, lowa, Agent for Western Towa and Neb. I»I.~j1 NI MON S1I0NVJ 000 31 HTFAO Correspondence of The Bik. soon ¥ |lovely etreets, etc. p w | My aitention and tempted my thirst, A x| tin cup hung where the gushing fountaln H Lot's wife and the angels ! TROUBLES OF TRAVELER, A Man With a Grip Crawling ESlowly Coastward, Dexver, Col,, Jaly |30, 1885, “‘How doos the traln leave for Deaver?” 3one ten minutes since,” was the laconto reply. T walked out on the platform with 8 mingled feelivg of strangling emotions—shame, obagrin, wrath, sorrow and eo forth and o on “y ohasing each other over avd across my troubled dieposition faeter than that flee- Ing train crossed the Ncbraska prai One who has eaid a sweet gcodbye 1o all his friends—gathered tc ].,ulhur his travelling bag—two satchels, an umbrella a lunch basket of a hundred pounds or 8o, finds himself at the depot with the pros- pect of carrylng basket, satchel and um- brells back again, Hdmng a second uml adieo, sfcer walting twelve lorg ours for the next wagon, knows how we Ielt. At that momert a southern trailn was Jeaving and a railroad «flicial learn- ing the state of affaits from faclal expres- eion or other eources, a messenger dashed after the departing tralv—the whistle sounds down the brakes, the train halted and I boarded it, umbrella, 1} | basket, satchelsand all my spirits flow ightly to the music of tha tron hoof. To 1155 right Iy the yellow Missonii plotar. eeque ard besutiful, it looked fringed hills, while to the west the Nebraska fields waving with golden harves's wero thmkly dotted with pleasant farm uses. Tlm scene was s fine one, tha aversge Awmerlean who could ride through such a country—a part of his own dowain with- out a conscious feellng of price that this was his own “hils nvative land’ “lg fit for treasons’ stra‘agems and spoils.” Bata colltsion—of my splrits —happlpets, I mean—1I had forgotten to take a check for my big box at the de- pot. Iam nodude, but I dotake a llttle pride in my personal appearance, and all my clothes, of conree, with the excep- tlon of the sult I wear, were in that box, I am going to the Pacific coast and have no friends there of whem I could beg, bonnw or or would for never fird lho Zhoit boggrigo and cast myself on the “Far West” just as I am within one ples. Hera we sre at Lin- coln—*‘Thirty minutes for dinner.” 1 had never visited Lincoln, so postponing my Monday lunch for balt an hour I clty. Here I wish it dlstinctly under- stood that I refer to architectural crea- tions and the beauties of nature such as the falr grounds, fine bulldings, Nearing tho post- u|office I hurrled in to purchese some o atlonery —rememberlng a little girl back in Omsha, who, very likely, was not thinking of In the yard a foun- taln of clear, sparkling water attracted A “bubbled wp.” I filled the cup till the 10 v { 0ocl, limptd drops trickled over tho rusty 2 bria. Just then, Mke the ghcst of Bangno at the Iulat, flitted by the ghoat of that departing morniog traln, The thirly minutes must be up. 1 swallowed the contents of the rusty cup at a sioglo draught, Holy horrors ! 1! Instead of cool refreshing water I hsd swsllowed an unholy mixture which would have rivaled the contents of that caldron that Bubble, bubble, Evil and trouble and the wicked witches of Macbeth would have grown merry, their labors o’er and ceased from toil forever more, LEGEL. PILES!! PILES!! PILES!! A sure cure for Blind, Bleeding, Itching and Ulcerated Piles haa been discoverad by Dr. Williams, (an Todian remedy), called Dr, Williaws’ Indian Pile Ointment, A single box has cured the worst chronic cases of 2 or 30 years standing, No one need suffer five minutes after applying this wonderful sooth- ing medicine, Lotions and instruments do wore harm than good, Williaws' Indian Pile Ointment absorbs the tumors, allays the intense nchlui particularly at night after felllufl warm in bed), acts as a poultice, gives ustant relief, and is prepared only for ' Piles, itching of private parts, and for uothing else, SKINJOISEASES CURED B Ur, Frazler's Magic Ointment. Cures as —by magic. Pimples Saltskin clear and beautiful, Also cures iteh, prSoObstinate Ulcers. :{uldhydmgghu, or niailed on receipt o t Boch retail by Kubn & Co, and Schroote . At wholesalo by C, ¥ e —— The Gypsies Must Return, Niw YOrK, August 1.—Judge C allen_to- in the ca'e of the gypsies brouzht here on & stoamer of the Bordeaux line, by which they will be compelled to return to France. e— ‘When Baby was sick, wo zave her Castaria, Whien she was a Child, she cried for Castoris, When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria, Whan s had Children, sho gave thew Castoria Black Heads or Grubs ho lotckes and Eruptions on the face, leaviog old, Rhume, Sore Nipples, Sore Lips, snd Goodma day in the supreme court rendered a declsion what will the shovelers do’ t s, of course, Tho mechanics find the same In all of their trades., When I learned my trade 1 tock the timber In the woods. It was cut and soored and hewed and hauled all by laborers, at fair wages. The lum- ber was farnished In the rough from the mill, with the stabshort on. We had to dress all the finlshing lamber by hand- work—the cornloe, the sidlng, the floor- ing, all tongne and grooving was hand- Be carpen- NEBRASKA CITY. Slirring Up the Arcient Bones and Bores of the Town. Datails of the Packing House Pro- Ject—A Rald on the Oats and Oanines — Missonri's work. et Well, T helped baild some of the first gang mills, than the moulding mills, then the unlversal shapers, then the gig saws, otc , eto., until now we do nothing bat ut 1hs work together, all the work ls Sunu for us by machinery. 1t is useless to enumerate. Not a trade but 1s supplemented by the machine, and the result {s that more work can be done than there Is any demand for withina glven time. The great question of the day Is re- duced to this: Oan we regulate the sup- p'y to the demand. Yer, there are two ways: 1. Abolish the machinery and return to primitive methods, and every hand would be busy and every man, woman d child would be reduced to abject very. For this resson which Is prima facla evidence, this plan, although it has its advocates, Is utterly untenable. 2—The cnly remeining way, then, ish to regulate the supply by reduc- ing the time of production. This s already tho method adopted. Correepondence of the Brx, Nenraska Crry, July 31,—Stlll we suffer from the Intense heat. Yestorday was the warmestr day of the season, the mercury reaching 102’ In the shade. All out-door labor was abated and the clty was almost as silent as midnight, Slckness is somewhat cn the Increase, and anxlous mothers watch their young with tender care, lest the heated spell, with its accompanying Infantlle allments, rob them of thelr hearts’ delight, My last letter created qulte a sen: tlon, and the News says: Tt is rumored that there is a reward of fifty dollars for any information that will lead to the “‘detection” of the Omaha BiE corres: ondent at this place, If the parties o Interested will “‘put up” the 850 at the Nebraska Clty National bank, they will be Fnctorlelbc]um, mlllh shut tfiuwn, and farnaces blow out because of over-pro- accommodated. T have confined | gotion, Then thousands suffer for lack myself strlotly to faots, and|of bread. Trade is thrown out of bal- and If the portles whoss corus are hurt want a little notorlety here is a chance for them, Work on our packing house began on Wednesday., The new housa s located in the southwestern part of the city near the old packing honse, Ita cspacity will be 1,500 to 2,000 hogs per day and will employ 150 to 200 men. It s & mammoth {nstitution and will add materlally to the commercial interests of this clty and county. A cooper thop, employlng 75 to 100 men, s to be built in the vlcinity of the packing houses to supply theee con— cerns with barrels, tlerces, caske, etc., which gives us another boost. The Con- solidated Taok Line company will also erect a large cooper shop here next month in order to exptdite their business, You 820 our snnual boom bas just reached ns, but It has struck us hard, Anotker *‘cat house” has been pulled, and on Monday night Ann McGulre and Mirs Anderson, the fomates, will dance the walk-aropnd to Judge White’s musle. We feel to rejoice at this, as these fa- males are £o bold and brazsn-faced when they go upon the streets that they dis- | gust every one with thelr lowand val- gar conduct, and we have heard ome- thing sald about tar aad feaihers being administered to them in large dcses. We believe tar and feathers would be a good remedy for their unchaste actlons, and would be only too happy to help admin- ister the doso. There Is considerable ance, merchants crowd the markets with forced sales, money retires to the vaulis, and the streets are thronged with idle men, All values are unsettled, and, al- though the country is burdened with a wealth of hsrvest and the treasury usults are teemirg with untold millions, threwd men are staggered atthe ques: tton of, What shall we eat and where- with shall we be clothed ! To get this matter before the people, 1 wish to eabmit some resolutfons: Resolved, That ton hours shall be constituted a day’s labor, and that every Wednesday afternoon and every Satur- day afternoon shall be a legal balf holl- day In which no work shall be done. Reeolved, That in sll blast farnaces, saw mills, emelting works, and all places where the foll time s requislte to sac- ceraful work, thres gangs shallba worked tnstead of two, snd all rallroads shall regulate their runs in accordance with this art cle. Resolved, That on all street rallways where the cars are ran for sixteen hours or moro, three gangs of drivers shall bo employed; aleo three gangs of etable men, Raeolved, That in all first and second class posteflices, slx hours shall consti- tute a day’s work for dellvery and other clerks, Resolved, Thaton all public woris ten hours shall constitutea day’s work, and that fifty hours shall constitute a week’s moral rottenness In this community at prosent any way, and the stench arislng therafrom is beginning te ruffls the sen- sltive nostrils of some cf the better clatses and we look for 8 rattling among the dry boues almost any time. Owing to the fresks of the ‘‘old muddy’’ in thelr vicinity the dlstillery has been compelled to shut down, and perhaps will remaln so until about Sept- embor 1at, Aa the fall cxmpa’gn approaches pol- iticians and politics begln to loom up. It 18 golog to be mighty tntereating in this county and no mistake, The slates are scircely made up yet, but when they are you shall have them. Suffice it to eay, the cindidates are *‘thicker'n floes on a dog,” there belng about eix candidates for each cfice. ~ Oh, what a “‘weeping and wailing, and goashing of the teeth” there'll be. Max, ———— REGULATION OF LAsOR, work where any employes are Lired by the week. Resolved, Thatall retafl stores, gro- cerles and saloons, shall ba held open ten hours only for business out of each twenty-four hours. When soclety was young and thero was no mechanical appliances to help do the needfal work, six eevenths of the time was found to be ample time for work, the other one-seventh was consecrated to rest and refreshment, and dedleated toa study of the law, that overy citizen might b an intelligent one Aud itfs a well.known fact that the nation which regulated time for labor, and time for rest, did more to advance civillzation than any of the other old nations, and its law glver will ke stand- ard aunthority until the end of tlme, not- withetanding his mlstake. It seems to me that this great mnatlon has within {tself braln power enough to regulate the supply and hedge over pro- ductlon by wise and eflicient l¢glelation, and o dlstribute the time of production A Panacea for the Ills of tho Toiler over the entlre year In such a way to for- ever exclude panics, strikes, and their whole herd of evlls. This course makes no war on cipital. This course does not allow ths antl- monopolist to bacome the wors! type of monopolist, monopolizing labor for politi- can ends, as the Knights of Labor are now dofng, but jadiciouely distributes the labor among the laborers of all classes over the whole fisld of supply and demand, This s no hasty conclusion. I have reached this end after years of study, and I am fully pireuaded that the time is ripe for this most just legielation, I am aware that anartlcle like this must be imperfect. It would take a book to hcld what is to be said, but I will ecatter a “‘handful of seed” on the mountain of financlel and labor trouble and hope that more able men may take up the matter and discuss It thoroughly. Lu;u productive power by shorier time of toil. More even distribution over the year of the hours of labor; more time for rest; more tlme for quell- ficatlon for a better claes of work No war between capitol and Jabor. No great monopcly of labor warring on monopoly of woalth, while blindly grasp- ing for the same. Bat In place of all thisa new era of better things, My objectlon to sll labor oreaniza- (Iom is that they are narrow, selfish and call for class leglslation, We need legle- latlon that will comprehond all, helplng all, to the detriment of none, 1 have referred to the Knlghts of Labor because tkey are more prominent jast at present than any of the other orders but | have no fear of the final results, their's is an effort at self-betterment, and will do good ulti- mately although misdirected at present. It 1s the direst kind of bigotry that inter'eres with a man's freedom to labor becauge not of our order, our church, or our political p-ny. For shame! Oat apon 1t forsver! ! In conclusion T might say this arrange- ment of time would give usa good Sun- day for rest and worship; there wounld be no longer any plea for its desecration as a day of recreation, and the Sunday Jaw could be enforced with & good con scienca. R D. MacOarray, Contraotor and Bailder, Oxana, July 50, 1885. e — and Hard Times, To the Editor of The Bek, It is evidens to every thonghtful mind that there are more workers than there Is work to be done, or a greater supply of labor of all kinds than finds a market. The resultis that competition {s unususlly great and contracts are taken at ralnously low rates, and while laber demands the ssme compensation as it did years ago, when thero was a diflcrent etate of thinga, mary are idle, and producers, mannhc—. turers, and contractors all over the coun- try are losing money, This is & bad showlrg, and 8o far ss 1 oan learn thera is no proposition before the people to meet the case. Sirlkes sre a fallure, utterly. The Knights of Lsbor, #o far do not seem to comprehend the situation at all in its va- rlous bearings, all this kind of buslness is founded on utter eelfishnees and s short- elghted and a failure *'Go west and grow up with the country young stale advice, To illustrate—i man came to me for employment, Sald he, “I've looked the clty over until I'm sore, and I can’t find a job even by pay- ing for the privilege of working.” I sug- gested the homestead. Yes, that s me, I've got a homeatead secured, and I must earn something to improve 1t *'I can't live on grass,” I came all the way from Holt county trylog to find a job, to help me through the winter and bere I am with nothing to do snd out of money, away from home. Hundreds of homesteaders come back to the more thickly settled parts for work during harvest, and others come to the towns for mechanical work, to help them- selves through the first year until they can gotin a crop, None of us are so ard pushed as the froutlersmen, The farm machinery s making the farmer almost eotirely Independent of cutalde help, The self-binder does away entirely with the old-fashloned harvest, with its throog of exwa help. The farmer hitches up hls team after the dew 9 o'clock a. m., and hls daogh- ter takes the lines snd dnvel to the field snd cots from ten to fifteen acres of graln and leaves it ready for fatherand the boys to thock up, which s all done by and no extra help needed. with the sulky plow, the 's daughter finds 1t a delightful employment to drive the teama snd plow. | BOWEL COMPLATISTA cnred and pre Toe same with the wheel rake for the|vented by Durry's Puse Mart WHISKEY, hay and the stacker. A girl 14 or 15 |8 per bottle, sold by Druggists and years old who can msenage & tesm can do | ‘rrocers more work on the farm for her father than five men could de under the old methods, and they are dcing 1Y, too, when there are not boys euough to go around, What is true of farm labor is true Gl S Ashora in & Fog, Batit, Mo., August 1,—The steamer *'Star of the Fast,” Capt, Qollins, from Boston to Kenucbec river, went ashora on Parker's flats, ten miles below Bath, in o fog this morning. with regard toall kinds of lsbor. Iepent - — au hour a few days sicce watehing some| JAMES PYLES PEARLINE ls high- graders with 8 ‘‘new era” idea, Three|ly ivdorsid by hcusckeep d others who have iried it, No soap is required, and cleaning fs done with a saving of much time and labcr, All housckeepers hould nss iz, men with twelye horees and a machine were loading ten wsgons with dirt and kept them busy. This new era ldes dis- penses with the shovelers entirely. Arnd COUNCIL BLUFFS. ADDITIONAL LOCAL, PERSONAL, Ex-policeman Wheeler is reported as being in Fargo, Charles Fisher, of Avocs, was in the aity yesterday. W. D, Hardin has accepted a position in the First National bank, Glenwood's new postmaster, T, W. Ivory, waa in the city yesterday, Fremont Benjamin, the Avoca attorney, epent his Sunday in the Bluffs, W. 8. Bullock, of Mapleton, was among the Sunday guests at Bechtele's. Fred Montgomery, ton of Dr, Montgomery, has entered the employ of D. W, Bushnell, Mrs, Capell, of Modale, is here on a visit to her hushand, Dr. Oapell, who has recontly established himself here. F. A, Sheppard, who is conneoted with Harkness Bros., has returned for a visit to his old home in Massachusetts, 8, A, Douglas, who is stopping at the Og- den until after the memorial services, he hav- ing been engaged by the citizens for an ad- dress on that day, has boen sick for two days past, but is now rapldly regaining his accus tomed vigor, | — IOWA 1x hMS Keokuk has $20,000 worth of a park. The old settlers of Johnson county will hold a renntonnear lowa City, August 21, John Wagner, a laborer, and Clinton Haneel, a painter, died ot suustroke at Iowa City. The Davenport Democrat eays there mre 284 places in Des Moines whero liquor s sold. According to the Des Moines Leader the democratic party of Iowa wants a leader—a chronic comptalnt, Oapt. I W, Griflith, the Des Moines coroner, is an old Mexican war veteran, and a soldler of the war of the rebelllon as well, e now school bullding at Sidney, now aboat completed, it is sald will be ore of tho finest structuras of the kind in the state. The Jackson brothers, the two noto- rious confidence opcrators, eecured thetr release a few doys ago from the Falrfield county jail on worthless bonds, and have skioped. An exploslon in the Taylor Willlams coal mine at Rapld City killed a miner named Henry Young. His face, hands and back were almo:t charred, while the clothes that were left on him were still afire. Ho was a slogle man and had baen in the employ of the firm for a consider- able time. A granger four miles south of Cedar Raplds, on the line of the Barllogton, Cedsr Raplds and Northern railway, on Tuesday afternoon threw a potato at the window of a passing train, breaking the glass, a fragment of which struck and cat the matn artery in the wrist of brake- man ot J. F. O’Hearp, who, but for the prompt attentlon of a surgeon happening to be on fhe train, would have bled to death, List Sundsy evening at 9 o'clock a man named Wm. Schacflor, employed as a machintst in tho C., k. L. & P, shops in Davenport, died from the effects of arsenic and ‘‘Rough on Bats,” which he took for the purpose of eulclde, He burled a son two years of ago on Tuesday and became ¢fllicted with melancholls, though his wife and another child re- mained for him to rare for. He was 31 yeara of age. A brother of Dr, Conoway, of Des Moines, fell dead in a charge at the battle of Lynctbarg, Va. The doctor 1ccently vistted the spot, where he found & man who had seen his brother fsll and who helped bury the dead. He declared Con- oway had been haried on_a hillock, and the ground belng explered a ekelcton was founi which the doctor Identltied as that of his brother by the shape of the teeth. In the cloth'ng was found a vial, and in it a elip bear nz the dead man's name. He had a presentiment of his fatc. e— — The Nuisances and the Remedy. Foul water, filthy strects, bad sewer- sge and uopleasant milk, when all crowded together in one cily, mako &s malarlous and unwholesome a state of affalrs as citizens can stand. But the dfs- gusted cltizens need not think themselves all bound for the cemetery on this ac- count, Malsriannd every other unclean {ufluence can bs fought off with Brown’s lron Bitters, Mr. F. Patterson, Mar- shalltown, Iowa, writes: “Brown's Iron Bltters has completely cured me of ma- latla.” [ Bullion in Banks, New Yonk, August 1,—The weekly bank statement shows reserve increase S3S( The bavks now hold $(4,724,000 in excess of egal requirements, S —— The eurett way to make & home run on the base ball field is to rob the limbs with 8t Jacubs Oil. All stiffaess wil then vanish. ¢ e — Household Perils, Hartford Times. There are two or three volatile liquids used tn familles which are particularly dangerous, and must be employed, If at all, with especlal care. Benzine, ether and ammonia constitute this class of sgents. The two first named 1lquids are employed in cleaning gloves and other wearlng apparel, and io re- moving ofl stalos from carpets, curtains, etc. ‘The liquids sre highly volatile, ana flash inte vapor as soon as the cork of the vlal contalning them is removed. Thelr vapors are very combustible, snd will inflame at loog distances from ignited candles or gas flames, and consequently they shounld never be used In tlhe evening when the house is lighted. Explosions of a very dangerous nature will occur if the vapor of these fluids is permitted to escapn into the room in con- siderable quantity, In view of the great hazsrd io handling these fluids, canticus housekeepers will not allow them %o be brought fnto their dwellings, and the course is commendable. As regards ammonla, or water of am~- s very powerful sgent, es- pealally the stronger kinds eold by drug- g'ste. An accident in Its use has recently cowe under our notico in which & young lady lost her life by taking a few drops through mistake. Breathing gas, under certain circum- stances, cauzes srrious barm to the lungs and membranes of the mouth and nose, It i8 a1 agent much used at this time for cleans'ng purpozes, and it 18 unchjsction- able if proper care is used lu its ewploy- \ment. The via's holdicg it should be kept apart feom others containlog mede cines, etc., and rabber etoppers to the {¥1ad chowtd be ueed. /RealEstate Bedtord & Souer 213 South 14th Street, Have a large list of inside 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, 9th, 10th, 13th and 16th sreets, We have fine residence property on Farnam, Douglas, Dodge, Davenport, Chicago, Cass, California streets, Sher- man, St Marys and Park Avenues, in fact on all the best residence streets, We have property in the followingad- ditions. Hawthorne. ______|MoCormick’s, Millard&'Caldwell’s| Kountz & Ruth’s, Lakes, Impr'nt Association Elizabeth Place: Wilcox, E. V.Smith’s, Burr Oak, Horbach'’s, Isaac & Seldon’ss Patrick’ss Hanscom’s Parker’s, West Omaha, Sl}in’n’s. Grand View, Gise’s, : Credit Foncier, Nelson’s, Kountz’ First Armstrons’s! Kountz’ Second, g Godfrev's,i Kountz’ Third, Lowe’s, Kountz’ Fourth, Kirkwood,: Coliege Place,:i: Park Place, Walnu ¢ Hill, West End, Boegs & Hill! Capitol,’ Reed’s First, Svndicate Hill, Plainview, Hill Side, Tukev & Kevsors Thornburg, Clark Place, Mvers & Richards. Bovds, And all the other Additions to the City. South Omaha. ‘We unave the agency fo tne syndicate lands in South Omaha. These The development of the packing houseand othar interests there, are) rapidly lots sell from $225 upwards, and are very desirable property. building up that portion of the city. Kirkwood. We have a few lots left in Kirkwood addition, which we offer at low | prices, terms $256 down balance $10 per month., These lots are on high level ground and are desirable. i Hawthorne. 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 neen established by the city council, and s very desira- ble residence property, ouly 16 blocks from Post othce, prices lower than xlx,gjmnum wdditions for a home or investment. These lots cannot be aten. s For Satz—House and lot on 21st St. Kasy| For SaLe—House and lot, 25th and Ohto (gma AR TR > go stroet; splendid corner, 85,600, 'OR SALE— on Farnam near o -Fi ’ iR Benacdd , ol om 8L~ Firat class business block, 845, ‘ ¥or Sare—Lot ln Walnut hill, $200, For Saue—} lot on Wheaton Bt.; goo For Sate—Lots on 20th, $560 each, house, 81,500, Fon Sauk—22 acres with elogant roridence |, Fog Naua=Flas coruar 1ot i Shins ¢ #3d) good barn, fine trees, shrubery, fruit, hot and | ¥°% 700, . ‘ i/ &01d water and all convenicncess first class| FOR SaLE—Lot in Millar? Place, specia f property in every respect. bargain, ) Fok SALE - 06 feet on Farnam street, near| Fou Lzase—Fine business property on 16th | 18th. Good business property cheap. St, and St. Mary's Aven: 1 Hon SALE— ¥on ReNt—Room 44x76, 8d floor, on 14th 13th and 14, wish good house, 83,000, treet, We will furnish conveyance jfree to any part of the city toshow property to our friends | and_customers, and cheerfully give' informa- | tion regarding Omaha Property. [ Those who have bargainstto offer or wish property at a bargain, are invited to see us. BEDFORD & SOUER Real e Estate Agents |3 S, 14181, bet. Farnam & Douelas [

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