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THE DAILY BEE--WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1885. - ‘ o My, © &';Lunols) e o0 € 5t Lo points West, North: The Great Rock Island Route 118 patrons that sense of personal sec e v t b ! neipal Tiek In"to Diited Siatos and Cantdas by by ko R. R. CABLE, Prost Gon'l Mgr, E. ST. JOHN, Gen'l Tkt & Pass. Ag't, - R, ?"E a) %li,!"hlbu ’ 1) }u 1shire, Oxan 8. H. ATWO0O0D, Plattsmouth, Neb. Assots OUAPITAL Pm7P.. #75,00. Ticketa Only 5. Louisiana State Lottery Oompany “‘We do hereby certify that we supervise the at rangements for all the Monthly and Semi-Annia ODrawings of the Lewisiana State Lottery Company and in person manage and control the Drawings themaelves, and that the same are condcted with honesty, fairness and in good faith toward all par. ties, and we avthorize the company o use this cer tificate, with fac-similes of our wignatures attached in ita advertisements, OOMMISSIONERS, 1 tod fn 1868 for 25 voars by the leglalatare for educationsl and charitable purposes—with & ganital of £1,00000—to which & reservo tandof over 50 000 has since been added. By an o"rwhelmln“ popuiar vole 1t franch whs mado & part o the p state oonstibabl sdoptod December 2d. A. ‘Zhe oniy Jowory ever voiad o8 and endorsed by the people of any state, 14 never scales or postpon The raad siogle oumber drawings take place monthly, A BPLENDID OPPORTUNITY TO W'N A FORTUNR 9th Grand Drawing, Class I, in tho Academ & of Music, New Orleans, Tuesday, Sept. 8 1885, 184th Monthly Drawing. CAPITAL PRIZE $75,000 100,000 Ticketa at Five Dollars Tach. Frac tions, in Fiftha in Proportion. LIST OF PRIZNS) 1 CAPITAL l‘:flLK 1 d ArricEnikTion T 9 Approzimatiou Erisos of s do 00 u ] do oo [»‘mm amounting $o on for rates to ol bo made ouly of the Company i New Orloans, hor information write oloarly giving fall POSTAL NO pross Monoy Orcers, 01 go in ordinary lotter, Crrenoy paof 55 and upwards ab our ex M. A. DAUPHIN New Orleans, La. Washington D, C. Mako P 0. Money Ordoru payablo and addren Regletered Lottor B W ORLIANS NATIONAL BANK Naw Orleaar, La, OR LOUISIANA SATIONAL BANK, New Orleans, La., STATE NATIONAL BANK, New Crleans, La., pense) addrossed, Or M. A. DAUPHT 607 nth 8t Breo o1 of thoroughbred and high grade Hereio d and Jersey Cattle, And Duroc aud Jersey Red Bwine, i0“\ (()III(.I‘ ()l-' l\“ TLaw department of Drako Univernty, Doa Moines Tows. Soud for Untalogue. Addrers A, IL McVoy, Dean or J. 8. Clirk, Secrotary, care Co¢ McVey & Clark, Des Moines, Towa m&o dwks DREXEL & MAUL, £ Svccrssons 10 JouN G, Jacoss, UNDERTAKERS | At the old stand1417 Farnam t. @riph solicited and prompuly attended to. T .22, “CANDEE” ARCTICS —WITIT— DOUBLE THICK BALL, TwoYears T N The * CAxpEE" RuBBER €O, give a better Rube ber than can be obtained elsewhere for the ame money, with thole great improvement of DOUBLE THICK BALL. Tho extra Pabber gt under tho tead, gives DOUBLE * Aslk o seo tho * CANDEE? Double Thick Ball Rubbers in Boots, Arctics, Overshocs, Aluskas, &e. A Common Sense FOR SALE BY T.N.Bray 1612 Douglas Street, GERVANIA NATIONAL BANK, New Orleans, La. UNION P.CIFIC RAILWAY CO. i | 1 i EE I CROSS TIES. The Union Pacific Railway Company will recelv tenders up to August 31st,1835, for 200,00 hard wood 1 cross ties and 800,000 8ot wood cross moie or less in lots a8 may be sgreed upon, at fol'owing point. 100 {000 onk and 100,000 oedar crocs tles at Kansay City, r Leavenwor b, Kane, 100,000 ouk and 100,000 Godar cross tles at C._uaoll Bluffs, In ; st Joseph, Mo.; Omaha, Pappiliion, ch. Jh gaingo and 100,000 narrow gago, i rors tivs at Denver, or at Station3 cnlino of Unfon Pacific Reilway, in Vicinity of Denver. 100,000 soft woo cross ties at Huntington, Oregon or Hl-.llh)m on uregon Short line, or Utah sud North- o 160,000 native wood cross tios, at Stations on main Iine o' Union Pasific railway, between Cheyenne, ¥ y0,, and Ogden, Utah. To'bo d livered not lator than April £0th, 1856 Adidress propcsals ana apiy for urecifications and other partculars to J. J. Buin?, General Storeheeper, Omaha, Neb. Oumaha, N, July 263D, 1855, . R CALLAWAY, aug-Stew-4w General Manager. HUMPHREYS’ Manual of all Diseases, Ty ¥, NUNPHIESS, M. D, TCULY DOUND 1N CLOTH and GOLD Mailed Free. 0 lery, Griping 5 iinrlu.-.(‘m.uung : Cold, Bronehitis T SeazonmEmS ey i SPECIFIGS. bt of Rold by Dru 1o FEor V100 Vaton St X, 3a Rt e O THE CHEAPEST PLACE IN OR lAJA T0 BUY o=t ] = Iss e Nl iy DEWEY & STONE (ne of he Best and Largest dtccks in the United Stater To Select From: NO STAIRS TO CLIMB, ELEGANT PASSENGER ELEVATOR BOYER CO., DEALERS IN Hall's Safe and Lock Comp'y FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF SAFES, VAULTS, LOGKS, ETC. LORO Barns oa Btre@t, COmaakha YOUNC MEN ! TN POTENT L MEN of a|| ages, ’]l!‘lh" lI n, or Hm\/-u Lo intend to marry, o .u,wlmnr\- 2 Who ar'e weak who find tbwlr POW “Ec itive youtnful v 1 m-A x,, o Tasiing i | open p [ . health, stored 10 vizorous oft lor & THE INDIAN CATTLE LEASES, Benator Dawes Sets Forth Teller's Wickedness in That Matter, From a Latter to the New York Tribune, The late adminlstration of ths Interior department 1s as muoch responsible for the present demoralized and deplorable conditlon of affalrs on the leased Indian retervations as if {t had directly sat aboat producing {t. That department is the rosponsiblo author of it, and Its files are fall of the evidence. When “‘cattlemen” first came to tha depariment for per- mission to lease Indian lands they were forbidden to erect a rod of fence or ap- propriate an acre of these lands, Strong and convincing reacons for this position wers at the tlme put upon the public rocords, and reman there still. It was not long, hovever, before a change in this respect came over the Interlor de- partment. It was announced In a printed letter addressed to one of these cattle- men, who was seeking in an open and honorable way to obtain a ratification of one of these leases by the secrotary. This man was told that while the depariment had no authority under existing law to ratify thess loases, there was nothing {llegal in them, and the department con sldered them highly advantageous to the Indiane. It would not, therefore, Intar- fere to prevent the Indians leasing thelir lands to tho cattlemen, and would, eo long a8 thore was no complalnt on the part of the Indlans, keep every other outslder off the lands so leased. It would permit but not approve, This letter became a oircular printsd and dlestrlbated among the cattlemen, and was the suthorlty and goide under which all the leases havo been made. % |Under 1t thero came to be a scramble for theso leaser, and the terms of rental In them all were eo fixed as to become most attractive to the Indlans, The en- ormcus profits made on cattle ranges caused every on already in ths business, and cvery one on the msko who could command oapital, to rush wildly in to socure every possible acre of these lands under this shuttlog its-eyes policy of the interlor departmont. All the lecsos pro- vided for the distribution of the rentsl per caplts among the Indiaus. Thls paliry rental of one and two cents an acre covering milllons of acres was soffi- cient to make the Indlans crazy to agres to the leases, And thus In an incredibly short time almost every avallable acrs of Indfan lands capable of grazing a Texas steer has gone under thessleases over which the tnterlor department would as- sume no control, for which it ostenta- tlously eloughed off sll respensibillty. The law seemed to everybody else plain enougb. It had put ell the Indiansand thelr lands under the control of the In- terlor department. It had declared all contracts with Indians void unless ap- proved by the necretary, and required all money derived from the use of thelr lands to be pald into the treasury to be appro- priated for thelr benefiv as congross should direct. Yet here was a secretary standing on the border and proclaiming to cattlemenand capitallate treating with wild blanket-Indiane: *I will neither approve or dlsapprove your contracts 1 think they are a good vhing. Make such as you ploase and 1 will keep everybody elso off while you occupy the lands, . But I will not be responsible.” Even the man who gusrded the clothes of those who stoned tho martyr Stephen, had sense enough to acknowled s his respon- sibility. The consequences of this illegal and {llogical p: licy of assentlng Indifference ara now apparent and deplorable, While it was going on it demoralizad the whole Indian service and unloosed all notions of cfliclal responsibility and devotion to the public service on the part of thess who came In contact with it. The cattle- men, left by the depsrtment to make such terms with the Indians ¢s they pleased could always make better oncs when the officials on the reservations were on their side, and the cflicials were always on the slde of thelr best friends, 1t was not long before the craze to be cattlemen and lessees, or at least to have some relative inside the pale, becamo an epldemlc, and commissions in the public eervice wera made a cover for negotia- tlons, and at the same tlme a paseport to the most temptiog alllances. In the ab- serca of all control over the leasss by tho department after they wero made, the In- dlans on the one eide and the lessees on the other, wero left to enforce their mu- tunl sycooments as beat they could, The Indlsu and the cowboy, sach with bis grievanze, went forth and established thelr own court for the redress of thelr wrongs, whilo the cecretmy folded his arms and shut his eyes. The distributicn of the rental per cap- ita smong the Indians has been tae most demoraliz ng featura of thls mlstaken policy. Tho law required the money to be turned 1into the uressucy. But In- stead the lesteo comes amovg the Indlans with his money once in_six montha and counts out to the head of a family the allquot part of the whole belonging to Lim, his gquaw and his chlldren, and it 18 gone almost as scon as counted, On a close Inquiry, for the last two months, among thoro most tamiliar with the ways of ‘the Indisn, the tertimony was unbro- ken that the moncy might better ba thrown away than distributed per caplta as has been provided, with tte knowl edgo of the Interior department, in all these leases. Take for Instance the Okeyennes and Arrapahoes, now the terror of innocent sottlers on the border. There bas been distributed among these lndlnnl, of thls rental, ever since the leatcs have been in forze, about $78,000 a year. This has been enough to enable every male Indian to purchage 8 Winochester rffls and am- maunition fu Kapsas, They have for many menths commanded the reservation and its agen, compelling hlm on more occasions thau one, with a rifle leveled at his h o0 execate thelr orders, Thelr confllcts with the cowboys, brought onto their retervation under these leases, are filling the land with terror, Yet five years ago these Indians were as peaceable s apyin the land. The agency iteelf then owned & herd, quietly snd sscurely grazng on the reservation, which wlith proper e, with Its increase, would pow npumber several thou- eand cattle, The echclara In the agency schoo), saviog from the goverment ratlon and Investiog in cattle, had also a little herd of their own, numberlng at that tima 05, Two of the pupils were married {n the month of August of that year and took their ehare of the school herd and went out to tot op & raach of thelr own. In that month I traveled nine days through that res:rvation un- guarded, slept securely In tents on the ., How is it now. The agency berd has been eaten up, the school herd hes been sold, Toose who have sttempted work have had thelr mules killed, their tocls destroyed and their foaces burned, while the Iodlan’ rifla stands as the mace of suthority ia the agen A month azo the war ofti department found itself anable to furnish me a snfe escort acroes the reservation and,I was compelled to go ronnd, P CAUGHT BY KAICHEN, Mr, 8, M, Simpson Relates How Miss Kaichen Oame to Hold 8,900 in the Lonisiana State Lottery, 8. M. Simpon, the Distribution Oigar store man, was leaning on bis show case Iast ovening when a News man entered the store, “Is the report trus, Mr. Simpson, that your sister-in-law, Mias Kaichen, has receiyed the money she drew in the Loulsiana State Lottery!" ““Yen; she was paid 815,000 yeaterday af- ternoon by Me. Sam Wood, cashier of the First National Bank of Denver, 1t was peculiar how she cawe to hold the lucky ticket. She old met one day that she felt lucky and asked me to purchase two fifth- tickets in the Louisiana State Lottery. The day before the drawing I received an order from Leadville from one of my customers asking mo to purchase bim ten fifth-tickets, ‘I met the Denver agent of the lottery and tought fifteen tickets fromhim, I sent ten of them to Leadville that night by mail, took five of them homs, gave two to Miss Katchen, and rotained three myself. The next morn- ing a messenger came to my store with a mes sago from the agont, statiog that he had re- coived ntslflfinm from New Orleans, to the effect that No, 8,000 had drawn the capital prize, and_that the number was among the tickets he had old to me. T told Miss Ksichen to look at her tickets, which ghe did, and found that she had No. 8,999, The ticket was sent on and the money secured. Two of the tickets held by me drow small prizes—one the fifth of $25, and the other the filth of $100. This is about all I Swedish Method of Battermaking. The Da Laval Cream Separation Com- piny have made publle the Swedlish methed of making butter for export, as prepated by a Pr_fessor of Agelenlturs in one of the Swedlsh sgricultural colleges. The polnts made are no: essentlslly different from thess Inuse In our best dalrles, except In the one fact that the salt 1s worked Into the butter by knead. Ing with the hands, Our system of work- 105 by pressiog ls altogether better. Ao solute cleanliness fn the milking, and daring the whole opsration with the mlk and butter, is Inslated on, and the foc glven cows must be such as will not im- patt an abnormal taste to tho milk or butter. It Is espeslally Inslated that the mlilk nsed in the dairy must not be mixed with that from cows ill or drylng up; and the milk should not be used in the dairy untll the sixth or seventh dsy aftor calv- Inz. Also that the cows' udders be cleaned and wiped dry before milking, that the milkers have per'ectly clean hands, and that the hands not come Into any contact with the milk, By the Swedish plan the place In which the mllk Is kept ought to be well venti- Inted, so that good and fresh as well as dry alr prevalls there; this also holds good throughout the dairy. The ventl- lation fs secured by means cf large venti- Iators, both at the floor and roof. Darlng the warm season of the year, if the milk 1s kept twelve hoars or mora before the separatlon can take place, It ought to be cooled In water or ica to 32° or 33° Fahrenhelc, If directly before the sep- aralon of the milk be below the tempera- ture of 77° 1t shonld be heated to 7T Fahrevlheit. Immediately after the sepa- ration the cream should be cooled, in ice by preference. The more thoroughly the think that is to be enid about it, Miss Kaichen thoughtshe hrd a Jucky day and the sequsl proved that sho way right.”—[Denver (Col.) News, July nc— Kitchew Wrinkies, Be economical, Clean castor bottles with shot, Wath the halr in cold rago tea. To brighten and clean ¢ld alpaca wash in coffee. To remove ink stains soak in sour milk over night. To brighten carpels sprickle with ealt befere aweeplog. Mix stove polish with vinegar and a tenspoonfal cf sogar, To pollsh a stove rab with a news- paper Instead of a brush. When cooking beans add ono half tea- mpoon of ealeratus, To remove tea staios from cups and saucers soue with ashes. =For burns apply flour wet with cold Water, as it quickly glves relief. When spongo cako becomes dry 1t fs| nice to cat in thin slices und toast. 1£ the oven Is too hot when bsking pleca a small dish of cold water In it. To remove mildew, soak in butter- milk end epread on grass {n the sun. If nutmegs are good, when prlcked with pin ol will inetantly o:zs out. To clean farniture that is not varnlshed rub with a cloth wet with kerosene. To prevent mustard plasters from blis. tering, mix with the whits of an egg. To prevent flatirons from scorshing wipe them on a cloth wet with kerosene. To brighten or clean silver or nickel: plated ware, rub witha woolen cloth and flour, Water In which korax is disiolved is good for the halr, and also to whiten the face and hands. ‘When there i3 a crack In the stove it can be mended by mixing ashes and ealt with water. To make paper atick te a wall that has been whitewashed, wash in vinegar or ealeratus water. ‘When clothes ara scorshed remove the stain by placing the garment where the sun can shine on it. @ Starched shirts will fron easler it you let them dry after atarching so you will have to sprinkle them before ironiog. The wings of {urkeye, geese and chickens are good to wash and clean win- dows, as they leave no dust or llnl, as cloth. To brigh!ca the inside of a coffes or tea pot, fill with wator, add a emall plece of soap and let It boil about forty- five minutes. To remove greaso from wall paper lay soveral folds of blotting paper on the #pot and hold a red hot iron near it until the grease is absorbed. To exterminate badbngs diesolve alum In water and apply to the bedstead with a feather. Bo carefal not to tomch the pa'nt «r varnish, e ——— Tough! cream s cooled the finer will be the but- ter and the longer will it keep. In relation to theaouring of the cream, it s held that, eizhteen or twenty hours D :fora the churulmr. the cream must ba heated to GG or 70°, in the winter high. er, in the sammer lowor; poured into the cream voesel, and set with 2 to b per cent buttermllk or sour cream from a previous churolog. The degree of temparature and the sour Ingredients should be so regulated that the cream direcily before the churning has Its right sourness. The tamperature in the cream-barrel must nover slok below the churalng tempora- ture, and nefther is it well to heat the cream above 74°. For the heating of the cream It Is put fn tin psns In water of 105°. not higher, and constantly stlired until the cream has reached the right temporatura for souring. The cream veseels, especlally i of wood, must be kept carefully sweet by repeated scald- ings, or, better, steaming, and be fully alred and dry before again being used. Cards are prepared for uniformly eonring the cream as followa: Twenty pounds fresh milk are heated 0 95" F., and kept in a stone jug, which Is placed In a box or the hke filled with hay and covered with a lid, 8o that the temperaturs is maintalned; after four hours, when tho milk is generally already sour, 1t is well stired, so that all the cream that has formed is mixed in, after which one allowa it to atand twelve or fourteen hoars longer, during which one now and then atirs the milk vigorously so that no thick lumps are formed; then the curds are ready for use. Should they not bo used immediately, they must be kept In fce-water. This quantlty of curds is suflicient for the souring of 400 or G00 pounds of cream. Darlog the first three hours of the souring one stirs the cream a fow times. Bat afterwsrds It must stand untouched until a half hour beforo the churning, when it must be thoroughly stirred. Through this it ¢htsius an ex- tremely sour tasie, It is better to have 1t rather too weak, for otherwlse the but- ter will acquirea f1at and, most frequent- ly, a bitter taste. The soured cream s cooled to 50° or G0 higher in the winter, lower in the summer, snd then stralned in the churn, which has before been rinsed with water of a corresponding temperature, The churn cught not to be fil'ed more than hslf or two-thirds fall of cream. A sult- able quantity of colorlng matter is put into the churn, eo that the butter gets a falnt tinge of straw-color, Oane must take care, in pourmg, that the coloring matter does not come to the wood in the chura, as the color would then easlly be- come uneven, The coloring matter mast always be regulated by the quantity of milk from which the cream bas been ob- tained. Then it ls churned with such specd that butter is obtalned In from thirty to forty-five minutes, and this is reguiated by the temperature und ths and quiok motion yleld buttar soon, alow temperature and siow motlon the con- trary. When the cream has tarned the chura- Ing Is inturrupted for a few seconds snd the cream that has dashed up on the lid and sides of the churn is rinsed down wlth water or ek'mnilk of the esame Djspepsia 's one of the toughest of dis- oazes to wrastle with, Many people have tried such a variety of alleged remedies for it, without success, that they will hardly believe dyspepsin can be conquered. But the rocord of Brown's Iron Bitters showa thousands of curzs of this discase. Rev. Jas, McCarty, Fort Stevenson, Dakota, says, *‘Brown's Iron Bitters cured me of severa dyupepsln S ——— A Kentucky postmistres moved, de“vum-d the followin dictory: **To the four or five hypocrites, slanderers and perjurers who procuted my re- moval I only desire to say that a day of reckoning will come,’ e —— "Why should the splrit of mortal be proud,” and lead people to baths in hmope, which clatlm to cure rheumatism, when fifty cents will buy a bottle of St, Jacob's Uil? ——— Kitchen anch must imitate the Chinese and “go,”~ [Hotel Mail, e — 1y o derives a patent of nobility from Canen Farrar, PILES!! PILES!! PILESI! A rure cure for Blind, Bleeding, Itching and Ulcerated Piles has been discovered by 1;. Williams, (an Indisn remedy), called Dr, Williams’ Indian Pile Ointment, A single box has cured the worst chronic cases of 25 or 30 yoars standing, No one need suffer five minutes after apolying this wonderful sooth- ing medi Lotions and instruments do more harm than good, Williats' Iudian Pile Ointment absorbs the tumors, allays the intense itching, (particularly st night after getting warm in bed), acts as a poultica, givos instant relief, and is prepared only for Piles, itching of plhulu parts, and for nothiog else, BKIN DISEASES OURED B Dr, Frazier's Magic Ointment. Cures as by magic. Pimples, Black Heads or Gr hn lotckes and Eruptions on the face, leaving Saltekin clear and beautiful,, old, Rhume, Sore Nipples, prioObstinate Ulcors, iceuld by druggists, or mailed on receipt o At 50 cents, 3ech retail by Kubn & C Becht. At wholesale by — The Governor of Kansas is an ass, —[Phil, Sheridan, Go , and Schroster & Goodman, As for General Logan he are writing & book. —{Philadelphia Times. Cape May is sedolent with visitors,—{ Phil alelphia Progress, * | Schroter & Cs temperature as that which prevalls in the churn, Then it {a cburned more slowly, in order to get the small flakes, cr pol- lets, of butter to collect, and now it is of great importance that the churning be stopped In the right vime. If ono breaks off too early, lees fs obtained, tnd if one churne too long, the butter becc1as oves- done. When the buttermilk separates {teelf from the pellets of butter,and these are scarcely the 8/z) of a pinhead and have a rough eurface, it 1s time to stop. The butter, when ready, ls taken out of the churn with a halr-cloth sleve, washed In one or two waters, where upon the buttermiik s pressed out, Then the butter is welgted and mixed with 2 or 3 per cent of good ealt, ln working over, the butter must never be rabbed, Lbui only pressed. Then the buttes must lie one or more hours untll it has got some firmners, then it Is worked over. In the summer it is_suitable o let the butter before the last workingover lle in a refr'gator, through which 1t obtaloe greater solldlty, As soon a3 the butter 1s resdy it is put Into firkins, (n which 1t is packed down closely with a wooden estle, to that no spertnres are left in the guner When the firkins are full the the surface is emoothed with a wooden spade, covered with olleloth, and strewn with a layer of fine sal: one-half iach thick. The firkin fs well rinsed with wa'er before use, rubbed on the sides and bottom with nlt, and kept as clean and white cutelde as possible. The whiter aud more sweot the firkin is the more deeirable the batter in the market. In the etatement, as collated, one Im portant matter has been omitted as pre- sented in the translation: After the bu:- ter in packed it should never reach a tem perature of over (0" else it s injared. If kept at 40° it la better, This tempera- ture must be waintalned dariog transit to market and until it resches the con sumers’ hands. sible Man d use Kemp's Balsam for the Throst and It is curing more cakes of Coughs, ronckitis, Croup, ud all T'roubles, than any other proprietor has authorizsd orad, druggists, No 211 ¥if- teenth street, to refund your money 1f, after takiog three-fourths of a botlle, relief is not ned, Price 50 cents and 81, Zvial size Throat and 1 medicice, 0 speed of the churuiog; high temperature | A BEAUTIFUL TOWN ELEGANTLY LOCATED. Large Lots at Reason- able Prices. A Good Investment 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. ‘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 eigh t hundred to one thousand families that will find em- ploynuent there a year hence. = 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 imity to the works, MANUFACTURERS. Manufacturers of all kinds will find it to their advantage to inspeet 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 me two hence with a population of B arty now, as a year or 00 to 10,000 people, this will become a desirable place for all kinds of business, and lota 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 nyestments 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 G streetssouth, Splendid lots from $225 EDFORD & SOUER 23 5. 4ih STREET, We have desirable business and residence”props arty,'for‘ sale'inlall parts of Omaha and do a general rea! estate business. Wo olicit bry- ers and sellers to call on us. We will give them all possible information free, and keep conveyance free to show propertylin any part of the city, Bedford & Souer,