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e e R i, Z ] cntikes, at seasons. Shatters the Nerves, Impairs Digestion, and Enfechles the Muscles, BEST TONIC Quickly and completoly curoa STl 0] and it on witnd Snrtehied il atita, and stre vlv does not in: o' Trom Bitters with the groats extaliafaction tor Malariy'and et preven e o Al and 1ike 0 spases, and will alwaps koop it on band as a ready friend o 1l onss s gboro i mark and crosd e linos on wranper o o ather, Made ool by oW A i ek, M. Tavmea’ 1A taining list of prizes for mcipy ot to. gven way by all do ‘mailed to any address on receipt i\k\\fi%&'k RRTONNATRENY ' 2w HROAC Gran g e YPERATING SELLL (00KI8G 7075 IR CLARKE: 8 oo © it b1l P il 5 % 5 T wg);sk!fl'é RNt ND FEE! UNTIL CURED! A written guaran f cure glven In evel ¢ undertaken, 4g-A itations Free and d. 3} ratcd Book and AND rghtful Case of a Colored Man, 1 contracted @ fearful cago of blood polson In 188 was treated o s 30mo of the bost physiclans in Ianta. They ueed the old remedies cf mercury potash, which biought oa rheumatim, and imp ed my digestive o) Every joint in me w swollen and foll of pain. When I was given up to dle my physiclans thought it would be_a govd time o tost tho virtues of Swift's Specific. When I com- ‘menced taking S 8. 8., the physicixn aaid T could Dot live two » ccks under the ordinary treatmet t. Ho commenced to give mo the medicing etrictly sc. ‘cording to directions, which I contlaued for several months. 1 tock nothing else and continued to im- oo rom the vary fimt " Soon, the rheumatism ett me, my appetite became all right, and the uloors which the doctor sxid wero the “most frightful ho had ever seon, began to heal, and by the 1at of Oo- tober, 1884, 1 wae & well man again. I am stropger now than I ever was before, and weigh more. 8.8. 8, haa saved me from an early grave. Ly MoCLENDON. osn 10 the employ of tho for somo acars, and I know the above statements to bo true. At tho time he ‘Degan takinz Switts Specific ho was in horible con- dition. I regard his cure almoat miraculous. W. B. Crossy, Manager. Chess.Oarloy Co., Atianta Division. Atlants, Ga., April 18th, 1885, LOOSE'S EXTRACT RED (LOVER _BLOSSOM The Great Blood Purifier. T OURES ©axcers, HuMORs, Bones, ULoERs, SwELL- 1808, TUMORS, ABOESSES, BLOOD POISONING, Caranni, SALT RHEUN, EXYSiPELAs, RuEU- Mais, and all blood and skin diseases, PRICE $1 PER PINT BOTTLE, OO0SE'S RED CLOVER PILLS, Cure Sick Head: nche, ll)l[;nn!‘. Indigesticn, and (}onlllp‘llum o8 of 26 pills 26 cents; 6 boxes$1. Loosw's Rup VER PILX RRMNOY, slire oure, BCc per box. wale by all droggists, or address J M. SE Monroe, Mich. Send {ar testimontale. PAVING PROPOSALS. Soaled proposals witl o received by the under signed until to'clock p. w. of Toursday, €6e £0th ‘of August 188, for vaving dlstrict No. 8, 1o the oity of Omahs, with € 1 rado saad +tone on & sand base 410 Cbickncss, samjlod of vaud 0. accom= & will bo dons I sccordance with plans and specifications on fle in We office of 4he board o publio works. ids to e sccompaniod by certified check in the sum of cns thous nd dotlars, payable o the ity of Omaha, a8 aa\yidenco of ‘good falth, Tho Doard of pubdie works resorves the right to rejoct wny or all bids, JE. Houes aug-87-10-11 Chm, Board of Public Workd. NOTICE, My wite, Mre. E'la Casoy, baviog voluntarily left sy bed and board, I wikl . 0t be responsible for any debts contracted by hier on iy accout. Oumiahs, Aug. 8, 1835, Joux QABRY. 859 bp FOR \ o Man and Beast, e wonsac N 10 g1 v 4 Mustang Liniment is older than most men, and used more and more every year, | smoking his A Story ofthe Mines Thirty Years Ago in Old Taolumne, Hartford Post, “] never told yon the atory abont my pard, ‘Oonfidence’ Jim, did 1,” eald a pe- triarchal and genteel-looking old gentle- twan to s trlo_of miners seated on the porehof the Tuolumpe hotel, at Soncra, one ovening recontly. While his man. ner Indlcated that he was a gentleman of education and some culturo, his garb showed that he was a remnant of that band of hardy pioneers who took the firet steps toward making Caltfornia what it is to-day—one of the grandest states in the unlon, Fully G0 years of age, yet strong and vigorour, the only eitects of of the froats of time being seen In his halr and beard, which were the color of the enowy peaks of the grlm Slorras, far away to tho osstward, As he sat calmly ter.supper pipe, and en- joying the exhilarating brecza which swept down from the sombre hills, freight- od with the aromatic scent of the pines, ho formed subject worthy of the pencil of a mastcr artist, «There are two things that make me think of Jim to-night,” continued he, romoving his wide-brimmed straw hat and running his fingers slowly through his white locks. “‘Ono is that it is just thirty years ago to-dsy that he was burled, and the other 1is that the fellow who preached his funeral sermon ln planted up thece on the hill,” Indicating with his thumb & burying ground over on the hill, wherein molder the bones of many a noted miner and desporado. “Yes, he laid by his pick and shovel, and went to judgment busted, just as the most ¢f we c1d mine {ll who stlck to the mines too long,” said the_speaker, in & musing tone, **You see, Jim was my pariner. We went to school together, walked half-way across the plalns, drank alkali water, fought Indlane, worked the mines, starved and frozs tcgather, hiber- nated in a log cabin with the snow ten feet around us, and had our good and bad times with the varying seasons. But Jim, after awhile, got tired of hard work, and at last adopted the profession of gambling, 1 did not like his plan, but Tie sald thers was nothing for him in the miner, and he propored to make a living a8 easily as possible. He was no ordin- ary man. Like myself, he had recetved an education thst fitted him for almest any gentlemanly following; but he lost his grip somehow, and never got & good hold again. LIl not forget tho Iatt time we were together. It was just such a beautiful day as this has been.” On that Saturday I dld not go to work, and was sitting in my cabin mending some clother, when Jim came in, T saw there was something wrong with him, but sald nothing. Finally ke took off his hat, and, keeplrg bis eyes fixad on the mud floor of the cabin, began plcking nerv- ously at his hat rim. ‘Bill," eald he, finally, in & queer volce, ‘I hope you'll not think I'm a d—4 fool, but I want to tell you that I am coff my color to-day, and [ have come to a deal in the game of life that's going to bust my bank. Iv's no use talking,’ continued he, as I at- tempted to laugh bim out of his fears, ‘I !|am dead certain that 1 am going under very soon, and that, too, with my boots on,” Idon't care much for that; a man might as well dle here av Maurderer’s Bar, on short notice, as any placo else; bat, old boy, 1 did want to see my folks at home once before I let go. It's no use, though, and so I've brought you this let- tor and gold-dust to rend back to my mother when 1 am gone’ Ho placed a esealed letter and a very heavy buckekin purse in my hands, and beforo I could gather my wits to remonstrate with him he was out of the cabin and striding the hill at a great pace, his head bowed down and his big sombrero pulled low over his eyes. I put the things away safely, and after puzzliog my mind with his freak, as | called it, awhile, I quite forgot the olr- cumstance until late in the afternoon, when I came upfrom camp to begin cooking my supper. L had just kindled the fire, when I heard a plstol shot, and then & popping as though & bunch of fire- crackers had been eet off. I went to the door, and pretty soon & man came rum- niog up the hill, and as soon as he got near enough for me to hear he yelled: ‘Jim’s killed’ You bet I jumped ss thovgh I had been shot myaolf, and was soon down the hill, across the canyon, and up on a little bench of land, where the whole town was gathered. 1 pushed my way through the gang of yelllng, ex- clted men, and, sure enough, there lay poor Jim, and I saw that death had too ood a hold on him to ever let go. He miled a little as I got down on the ground beslde him and lifted his head, but all he could ssy was: ‘I told you it was coming, old pard, but I did not think it would get here so soon. Roemember your promise.” The blood, ranning out of his mouth, choked him 8o he could say no more, and in a minute he was dead. I then had time to look aroand me, and saw that he had not goue on his long trip alone; for, sirotched on the ground a fow feet away, were the bodies of three men, two of whom wers dead and the other just giving his laet kicks, The cause of all the bloodshed ay ls often the case, a woman, Littla May Weston, the daughter of a widow who kept a boarding honse at the Bar, & beau- tiful glrl about 10 years of sgo, had been met by four drunken miners from neighboring camps, who insulted her tn the presence of Jim. The result was that he protected her, and was shot at by one of the strangers, He returned the fire and I have already told you what was the result, Well, I proposed to glve him an extra funeral, and among other things declded to have s sermon preached, like ceremony having never been af tempted before in that camp, I found a fellow named John who bad once been a lawyer, who said he would try and say something when we planted poor Oonfidence Jim. He wrote out his ser- mon that afternoon, and, wken he had learned t, gave the copy to me at my request, I have been reading It over this afternoon, and have it here In my It's almost faded ou’, but I can t. Here it is, juet e deliv- ered It in his queer way, over the body of Jim the next day, as it lay in the rough board bex I biad knocked together for s coffia, *It was one of those calm Sunday mornings when nsture itself seomed st rest, and, when the rough voices of the miners rang out on the summer ale in that grand bymn, ‘N My God, to Thee,’ I just cried like a baby, and could not help it. Well, Johnson got up on s stamp over the coffio, and the groop of three hundred miners involuntarlly fol- lowed his example when he removea his hat, aud prepared to speak, After look- fng aboat him in rather a confused and helpless menner, he gave a few prellmi- nary coughy and sald: ‘This hero buaf- uens s rather emberrassin’ to me, this talkin' to the ru'ns of a dead man; but it shall pever be satd that I was not willin’ to do my part toward makin’ things go off’ pleasantly on all festive occaslons, 1 Jdon't know that this ocoaslon can be ealled In that category; but 1 do know that I am golng to make a mess of this business, for | am much better at statin’ the reasons why a manshould be stretched for horse-stealin’ than at tellln’ what an angel he was, when I know that he wasn't snything of the kind. You all knew Jim— most of you knew him to your cost—bat I know thatyon will all of you joln me in saying that when you throw out the matter of cards he was honor to the backbone, and when it came to the rights of man and the pursults of happlness he bet on the constitution high. T don’t propose to go a-gongin’ around In the past for some of his cset-off virtaes, be- cause I don't want to have some of you lop-earod cusses down there riss up and call me a liar, for If you do my ideas of equality will cause me to tura this faneral into s fight in a holy minute. Before 5ou, in the solemn, sflent slumber of the dead—I got that out of a book—lies the once kind friend and bitter enomy, Oon- fidence Jim—which sin’t worth frottin’ about. Boosute, if Jim had a soul, and I guess he had, that's the artlcle we need to do some very hard prayin’ for; for Jim, you know, was to some extent like tho rest of us—no angel to speak of— and 1 have a lingerln’ uncortainty as to whether he 1s takin' mwuch stock in the angel racket now, more than fn a busl- nesn way, because, knowln' the man, I think he had a farc-mill ranning within half an hour after the boat landed, and was gcoopin’ the he-angels out of thelr hard-earned dust too fast. Of coutse, that's only a matter of oplnlon, but I know Jim was always looking out for the main chance, and would never let such a lay-out go around the cornor for want of taking hold of it. Jim was no Chelstian like the books tell about, but wherever he found poverty, thore ho would stay, and 1t was & regular circus to see him cave arourd until he had everyono foeling as good as he did. | ¥ He was brave—too brave. I have often thought that when he was fitted out the Lord didn’t have any more fear, #o he put in a double dose of brave; that cost him his life. No man ever saw him dronk; no man can say he wasnot a good man, the way common folks moas- ure men. 1 say that Confidence Jim, 1yin’ there now in his gore, with six bul- let-holes through him, can measure rec- ords with m ny good men, and have a balance In his favor. No man respected virtuo more than Jim—no man would pro- tect it sooner; and when them four cusses went to Insulten’ the widow’s daughter, he told them to lat up, and you bet he meant it, You koow how the game was played; you know how Jim HENDR The Vice President is Beaien at a Game of Ohess, New York World, A tall man dressed In rovere black, and wesrlng a very shiny and very high hat, ontered the Kden Masee yesterday. People who looked at his white neckile tled so simply under his collar, and_the patriarchal way in which he walked about, eaid that ho was a church deacon, Other far soeing prople, whoso sensitive nerves had been sifrred up by & numbsr arrests lately made by Saperintendent Murray, advised their nelghbors to be earoful. No one thought for & moment that he was Vice President Hendricks, but it was, and he walked up and down, and looked at himself in wax. Thote was a number of people around the wax vice presldent, and they ex- pressed their oplnlons freely. Some satd he was a smart man, and others sid he was not, and the tall gentloman had as much exprension in hts face as his waxen imitation, The wax gentlomsn looked more comfortoble than the flesh-and- blood gentleman. The vice president eventually went up to a little man who sat behind a chess- board, His kingsand qaeens wore before bim and although he did not speak he moved his bishops and kunights around so intelligently that the vice president thought he would Jike to plsy & game of chess with such an Infelligent lttle wax gentleman So he sst down at the board and pushed his very high silk hat far back on his head, People began to gather. They had learned who the player was and théy crowded very close to him and the wax player. “‘I'wo to one on the wax man!” smld a oung man with a brown mustache. “1'[l take you!” was the answer from another young man, and tho money was pat up In s jifiy. “Ho looks just like his plotures, doesn’t he?” anothsr young man asked. “Yeu,” a friend replied, “‘if he had those little slde whizkere shaved off. I don't think stde whiskors are becoming to a man who may be presldent.” ““He'r got a dandy euit,” was the next remark heard. “I'll bet be doesn't got it made In In- dlana,” was heard a second later. Mehnwhile the vico prosident played. 1t was remarkable how well his antago- nist, consldering that ho was not alive, moved the picees. Ho got exclted. Not so with the gentleman in wax. His Iaid out two of them after he waa down. 1t was a bloody deal, and it cost him his life; but he took thrae of them with him, and if I know Jim—and I think I do— ho will finish tho deal over there. Hls star of destiny dld not burn very bril- Uantly through his lifs, for he was only a gambler and earned his bread by the turn of a card; but over there in the hills, when the world was smiling upon him, and his game ecomed to hold as many chances a3 ever—when it scemed 80 good to live and so hard to dle—he, by his last act on earth, caused that star which had gloaraed £o dimly in the psst to burst forth inall the glory of true, honest manhood, bright as the noonday sun, and then a few choking gasps, a fow flatter- ings of the brave heart, and the black night of death settled over him and wiped him out. Hls name will not be on the pege of future bistory, nor will the songs of later days tell about him, but that lastact makes a king out of plaln Confidence Jim. _And if there is a God, and a just one, He Is golng to give the run of the cards to a man who, witheyes wide open, will faca death to save the honor of a woman., But to conclude, gentlemen, there ain’t any more use of further agony over this part of the dis- course, or, for that matter, these rains here; for when it comes to protecting women, 1 want to say, and eay it loud, that this camp is chockfujl of Confidence Jims. Amen, The crowd will now ad- journ to One-Eyed Pete’s saloon and sample his new barrel of devastation,” Tor washing clotnimng, sna a1 jaundry and cleansing purpoes, JAMES PYLE'S PEARLINE is a favorite compound. It does not Injure the fabrics, snd saves a great deal of Iabor. Sold by grocers. ————— Afraid of His Shadow, New York Tribune. ‘A colored waiter In an up-town hotel, overhearing two men from the south talking about ons of their neighbors and his etingy and penurlous habits, spoke ho, boss! T'se ’'quainted wid dat man. 1 kin tell you, gemmen, hado jess equeezo & cent till am hollera—yum, um}”’ “Why, what do you know about kim, you black rascal!’ ssked one of the Quents. “Yah! Yah! Oh, 1 know um,” chuckled tho darkey. ‘‘Why, boss, dat ole chap he alwaye_walks down town to save cab fare. Yoy, sah, and he crose over and walk down on de shady side.” ““Why, {an’t that all right?” “Yah, yah! Itam all right ona hot day. Dat ole man ko do um all de time. He nebber walk in de sun becaz he's fesred his shadow ax him fur sumfin, Yah! Yah!” The Beg d the Flea. 1f a one hundred and fifty pcund man had strength In proportion to that of the beetle, he could lift nearly 200,000 pounds, 1f he wero sgile in Proportion to the agllity of the fles, he could leap over a three story house. Some poor fellows are so feeble that they can neither 1ift nor leap. Their blood is poor, their digestion bad, avd their energy gone. Give such men Brown's Iron Bitters, which will earich thelr blood and tone them up glorlons ——— Exporting Indisns to Germany, Portland Oregonian, July 20, In an old country | prietors of museuwms find it hard to pro- care new attractions, This will sccount for the fact that J. Adrlan Jacobson, ethologist of the Royal Berlin Museum, hss been gatherlog Indian cariosities for the past four years along the northwest [ He has collected seversl cu £ thess articles, and, to ¢ mplete his wonders, bas engaged & chiof and eight men of the Bella Coolas, a British Colum- bla tribe of Indlans, e arrived here with them yesterday, and leftat 3 p, m. for New York, They are under contract for nine months at $20 per month, Thelr names, which will add meeh to the at- tractlon in Deutchland, are ¥a Coutlas, chief; Ick-Lohoneb, Ka-che-lis, Ham- Chick, Ruck Mulshe, 1ok ka- Qaenah, Elk-gut and Pooh-Poob, long journey will make these attrections rather expensive, but ‘‘though they cost high, we've got to have them."” Germany pro- — 1t may be true that there are two sides to moat questions, but there can only be oue to the question as to the efficacy of Bt. Jacobs Oil, | ——— The Bulgatian mozk, leadlog a dog snd giving free lectures, s the latest sen- sation in the town of Dubuque, calm, quite plaster-of-paris blue eye beamed upon the crowd, and it is no ex- travoganca of specch to say that under the most trying ordeal he remalned the same calm, imperturbible gentleman of the first part of the game. He had such an inexpressive facs that he must bave been a master at face. His hands moved quickly and without a blt of nervousness, and it was noticeable that he dld not bite his lip the way Mr. Hendricks dld. Some of the remarks that went around at this stage of the game wore like these. ¢‘Five to one on waxworke.” There were no takere. ‘‘Hendrlcks is a dsndy player, but the wax man can give him poiats,” “That, fellow In wax is a dalsy.” The game finished avd the vice presi- dent arose, defeated. He put on his high sllk hat and moved out of the crowd and left the building. A spruce, dapper little gentleman came out of the wax man with the blue eye and said: “Phow! It's hot In there. He'ss pretty good player—for an Indianian,” e —— FEVERP, leading physicians recommend Durky's Pone MALT WHISKEY, Recom- mended by leading Physicians, Sold by Drug- gists and Grocors, T m— A Fish Bet Declared Off, Detrolt Free Press. A fow days ago, after a couple of ee- teemed citlzens, who are nelghbors, had arranged to pass a fow days with their familles av a lake on Oakland county, one of them offered to wager & box of cigars that he would catch the largest fish, The wager was promptly teken, and the next day one of the gentlemen put in an ap- pearance ata fish stand on the market and eald to the dealer: ““Havo you got & frosh pickerel welgh- Ing sbout fifteen pounds?” “I have, sir.” “Well, I want you to put him on ice and ship him to mo at —— Lake, I pro- pose to catch him on a hook out there.” “Very well, alr. 1 think Vil ship the two together.” *‘The two?” “Yes, sir. Mr. —— (mentioning the other esteemcd cltizen) was here an hour ago snd bought one welghing twenty pounds! Tt will take less fco to pack the two In the same box!” Thy fish were pald for, but the bet wau declared off. . — A Sensible Man Would use Kemp's Balsam for the Throat and Luogs. It is curing more cases of Coughs, olds, Asthma, Dronchitiv, Oroup, and all Throat and Lung Droubles, than any other medicice, The proprietor has suthorized Schroter & Conrad, druggists, No. 211 Fif- teenth street, to refund your money if, after taking thrae-fourths of & bottle, relief iy not GIE AN REMEL TOR. PPAIN. i URES Rheumatism, Neuralgia, B ho, H ach adach TO WHITTIER H1dsl Charies 86, St Gowls. M Nerinig “hysical Weakn Fan of Thioat. Skir a: 3nnas, ves and Ulcers \ Positive Written Guar cuin prompt] anentlycured by r iy Ve Manhood Restore REMEDY I'REX uthfol impro gansing Premature Dec vons Dobility Banhood, &c., having remedy.iasd which hio will s Aaddross J.ILRE ared without suf All corresponl 0 R. H. TR MAKSTON REMEDY 0000 et Vonics £ FINE LINE OF s HOODBRIDGE BALS, THE ONLEY EXOLUAIVE USIC HOUSE TN OMAHA' NEB. IN BOTTLES. Erlango bach B Pllsner. e TIO, st. Louls | Anheu “Milwaukeo | Schlitz P lanor.Milwaukeo ..Omaha | Alz, Porter, Domestioand Rhino Wines. ED MAURER, 1213 Farnam 8t “'CHICHESTER'S S 2 Whe Original and Gniy i prices, terms $25 down balance $10 per month. {BURG- AMBRICAN CEET COMPANY, obtained, Price 50 cents and $1. Zrial size free / e ——— Crabbed Age and Youth, Pittsburg Dispatch. A lady told me the other day: “I am sorry I am growlng old. 1 look forwsrd focliage as an sfiliction, 1 oan seo nothing in it but tears and regrete. ] is the.baldest sort cf pessimism, Old age {s not so barren of enjoyment as many suppose. 1f there 1s no joy like the joy of youth, the rapture cf a firat love, the thill of & first ambitlon, there is also no pain like youth’s pain, 8o total, so fatal, 8 hopeless, blotting out heaven and earth. This never comes In after life, because the sufterer, if he or she have loved to any purpose at all, has learned that God never meant any human beiug to be crushed under any calamity like a blind worm under a stone, Theee obaer- vations were made many years ago, but !:my are as {rue to-day as at any former time. S — An Uprnight Judge, Drake's Magazine, “1ll allow no mau to call me a lar and go uppunished,” taid a Texas judge to a lawyer who had just committed that offense, *You are fined $10, sir.” “fu's the truth, though,” replled the lawyer, a1 ho pald the money. “ don't care if it ls the trath,” re- torted the judge. “'A court of Iaw s no place to tell the trath.” e ——e When Baby was sick, we gavo her Castoris, When she was & Child, she cried for Castoria, When she became Miss, shio clung to Castoria, When ahe had Childres, she gave Wem Castoria Divect Line for Engiand, France and Germany. mehips of this woll known line are , ln weter-tight compartwonts, and are fr: nished’ with every roquls! weke tho passange both %fe and agrecable, the United Etates and Europoan mails, N Tousdsys and Saturdays for Flymout Oherboug, (PARIS aud TIAMBULK) ¥ ‘First Cabing00-100. Btecrago to and $10. G.B. RICEARD & €O, Gen- New York and icago or Heury 2 Marry P, Deul chiooneger, in Country. § from Hambu) b M Gmaha; Gronewig "CANDEE” ARCTICS —WITH— DOUBLE THICK BALL. TwoYears uble Wear, <100 onthe "CA\\Q‘X’ sole. oup;q ryjckBall The * Caxpee Ru: o, give & better Rube ber than can b oblained elsewhicre for the same noncy with their great improvement of the DOUBLE THICK BALL. The exira thickness of rubberright under the s DOUBLE W EAK Ask to see the (A ? Double Thick Ball Rubbers in Boots, Arctics, Overshoce, Alaskas, & A Common Sense FOR SALE Bedtord & Souer 213 South 14th Street, Have a large lis* 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 strects, Sher- man, St Marys end Park Avenues, in fact on all the best residence streets, ;, We have property in the followinglad- ditions, Hawthorne- Millard&'Caldwell’s Lakes, Elizabeth Place. E. V.Smith’s, Horbach’s, Patrick’s, Parker’s, Shinn’s, Gise’s, Nelson's, Armstrons’s’ Grodfrev’s,i Lowe’s, Kirkwood, ;| College Place, Park Place, Walnuc:Hill, ot | West End, Borgs & Hill Capitol, Reed’s First, MoCormick’s, Kountz & Ruth’s, Isaac & Seldon’ss Hanscom’s West Omaha, Grand View, Credit Foncier, Kountz’ First Kountz’ Second, Kountz’ Third, Kountz' Fourth Svadicate Hill, Plainview, Hill Side, Tukev & Kevsors Thornburg, Clark Place, Mvers & Richards. Bovds, And all the other Additions to the City. South Omaha. We uave the agency fo tne syndicate lands in South Omaha. These lots sell from $225 upwards, and are very desirable property. The development of the packing houseand othar interests there, are] rapidly building up that portion of the city. Kirkwood. We have a few lots left in Kirkwood addition, which we offer at low level ground and are desirable. These lots are on high 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 peen established by the city council, and is very desira~ ble residence property, only 16 blocks from Post office, prices lower than adjoining additions for a home or investment. beaten. Fon Sarz—House and lot on 21st St, [Kasy terms. Fon SaLe—22 feet on Farnam St., near 11th St 8,000, Fon Satz—Lot in Walnut hill, 8200, Fon Sauz—Lots on 20th, $550 each, For SaLE—22 acres with elegant residence, good barn, fino trees, shrubery, fruit, hot an 801d wator and all conveniencesj first olass property in eyery respect. Fon SaLk— 66 feet on Varnam street, near 18th. Good business property che: ¥ou Rz —Tioom 44578, 84 floor, on 14th tree! These lots cannot bo For Sate—Honse and lot, 25th and Ohte go street; splendid corner, $3,600. Fon SaL — First class businesa block, 845, Fon Sauz—} lot on Wheaton Bt goo Bouse, 81,50 Fon 8aLE—Fine corner lot in Shinn s add! tion, $700, Fon Saug—Lot in Millar® Place, specia e e Fine bual rty on 16th ‘on Lzase—Tino business on St., and St. Mery's Auuu.l’“‘l’* v ifon Hai—} lot on, Ohlcago St botwaen 15th and 14, with good Bouse, $3,000, We will furnish conveyance free to any part of the city toshow property to our friends and customers, and cheerfully give' informa- tion regarding.Omaha Property. Those who have bargainsito offer orfwish property at a bargain, are invited to see us. BEDFORD & SOUER Real Estate Agents T.N.Bray ys3s, 8t bet, Farnam &Douelas 1512 Douglas Street.