Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 18, 1885, Page 2

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THE DAILY BEE--TUESDAY, AUGUST 18, 18€5. *LI GNIWW0O3Y SISIDONUA ANY SNY!OISAH BEST TONIC. ning Iron with 1y and com ' Dysp ny Indiges » Blood, Malarin,Chills and Fevers, 'l Meuratgin. e unfalling remedy for Diseases of the Kidneys and Liver. It 18 invaluable fo ‘Women, and all w Disenses peenliar to lend sedentary live Tt does niot injure the teeth, cause headache,of prodiice consiipa ther Tron medicines Ttenriches and purifies the blood, stimuln the appetite, nids the assimilation of food, re Yieves Hearthirn and Belching, and strengthe assitude, Lack ot 1ine has above trade mark and erossed red lines on wrapper. Take no other. . HROWS CHEMIOA® €0 RALTINORE, XD \ LT L RTOREISANNEAN HROAC GLAM . covine DY CKEST AND 277 TRPIET S0KIBG SOV Byr DINCE SELLTS e [ b=y o (IRES @PIE== Y L) !LINTILXI:IJFEDI “A9%A written guarantoe of cure given n ever girgundortakent BeAll cansultations Free an inered. Dr. Clarke’s Celebrated Book and Vgtings (In Plafn envelopes) two stamps., D CLARKE, M, D.,180 S0, CLARK ST, CHICAGO, KL&s Indigestion Cured. 1 suffered for more than five sears with tion, ecarcely able lo retain the simples myj stomach. Thetur ning sensation w s incolerable, and my whole ¢ystem was deranged 1 was wakeful and could nct fleep, and consequently more or les3 nervous all the time. I decline in fi and suffered all the usual depres t 1sst, failing to find r om- moticed the uso of Swilt's Specific. I began to im- prove af once, The medicine tened vp. the ach, strengthened the direstive orgars, snd socn all that burning ceased, and I could retain food without difficulty. Now my health is g0od, and can eat any- thing in the shage of food, ond digest it without the slighest difficulty. 1most cheerfully bear this timeny because there are bundreds suffering as [ wag, and [am gure can be ag readly healed. fake the prescribed dose after esting mstead of before, JADMKS MANN, No. 14 1vy sirect. Atlanta, Ga., May 18, 1855. Treatise on blood and tkin disesses mailed free, The Swit 8peci%o Co., Drawer3, Atlanta, Ga., or N. Y. 167, W. 28d St. DR. RICE, ety 30 Coue Pt sow 1. TOOSSEPES BXTRACT Red Glover Blossom cUuRnus Cancexrs. Irnaca, Mich., ¥e 8.3 Toops & Co, ommon BEL Mick Yo b 58 oer Krown, You Aro wilcome to ise this for the o IR Respectully, MRS, L. A. JOHNSOR, Scrofula. 2.3, Loos & Co., Moxnow Atk O SAnUAT 7, 188 L To08 & O, Mo BRIk, e Lr ‘been afflicted until she gave your Extract of Ked Clover ai am h-pyy %0 say she has experienced great s 15 Dub s slight testimonial of my appreciation &l s 1 pans P tranlty, Slion e L Al S +.... Lam,veryrespctfully, IL ARMS, Qirys:u’)ela.s. oL205, O, Doo. st 188 8.2 Looss & o, Moxnom Ml O Do 185 JANTA~1 commenced taking your Red Clover, owo o, for 1ry,_uwm-, and bave not boen n‘h-ml‘hl tl: el -l.l;,'".hm.. Think you oty Trulyicino KWy o sprmene, ¥ Canicer on the ‘in’ behi Frever Sores. R. B. flyman, of Grand Rapids, Mich., says—Aftes WS Dockara gy aed Wi 0 i Fondecrs Bt o Chirer ' Dad Gade of Jicimi. OF Fever Kore on tho Jeg, aly used twp pounds o y i Solid Extract ked Gloves As a Spring Medlcine Tonlo and general Blood Purd peritndtcieg Yor mio by W ar e or 0. B & G Woiroo. Mieh Imported Beer IN BOTTLES. Bavaria | Culmba h Kalse Bavaria Bromen Louls Iwaukee | Schlitz P 2 aukoe maha | Ale, Porter, Domesticand Ehine Wines. ED MAURER, 1213 Farnam 8t. PENNYROYAL PILLS “CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH." inal and Only G Bewaroof worth kYo " NAME PABER. FOR Yot Man and Beast, ssttft™ 1 il enace . ! Mustang Liniment is older than most men, more and more every year, and used CROWNED CRANK. King Louis of Bevaria and His Pession For Building Splendid and Costly Palaces. Plenty of Enormous Debts and Noth- ing But Promises to Pay Them With, Correspondence of the Philadelphia Times, The other day King Louis 1L ¢f Bava- rla had a very celebrated German actrees play “‘Theodora” in his presence and not another pereon was in front, not even a member of his own suite. Now I hol that that s no way for a man who Is so heavily In debt as his royal knibs un- doublededly is to amct; bat then, you know, he has a passion for the stage and . | that excuses him In the eyes of a good many. Another patsion that he has long indulged in s tiat of bullding, His father and grand-father had also a taste for bullding, but they eatlsfied 1t by erecting muoseums, picture gallerles, echools and colleger. Louls IL builds nothing but palaces and chateaux. Every- where that an eligible eite can be found in the Bavarian Tyrol he erects a Gothic structare with a donjon tower and crene- Iated wallse. Wherever he finds a se- questered glade in the midst of almoat inaccesstble rocks there he plans a royal pleasure house surrounded with magnifi- cent gardens, Wherever he discovers an uninhabited lsland In the bosom of rome Inko that reflocts the snowy peakn of the eastorn Alps there he bullds a villa copled after some of those that Tarso and Arls- o have described in their poetlc accounts of Italian chivalry. SIX NEW CHATEAUX, At the presont tlme the architects of kis majesty aro at work at six different building operations, in a5 many parts of the kingdom. On an feland of Lake Chlem they are ercoting the chateau of Herren-Chiomeeo and if It is ever ccm- pleted according to thelr plans and spect- fioadons, it will eclipse all that Louls X1V and Louls XV achieved at Ver- sailles. No descriptlon will convey an adequate Idea of the refined luxury and splendor of the interlor of this chateau. No one 1a allowed to vislt It, but 1f one- half of what the workmen say ls true, the gilding, rare marbles, rich hangings and gorgeons furniture surpass all the won- ders of the Arabisn Nights. The king's bedstead alone cost $5(0,000—mind you, I am only repesting what s sald by others and won't vouch for the accuracy of thelr statements, but what I will vouch for Is that though the works at Herren- Chlemsee have been in progress for twelve years and have cost £8,000,000, as yet they sre only one-third completed. The buliding is a copy on an enlarged scale of the enormous palace of Versallles and like its model is surrounded by a park, in which there is a system of fountalns, cascades and lakes, which requlre more water for a dlsplay of a single hour than the clty of Munich consumes in a day. Cloge to the Hohen Schwargan palace, which was commenced by Maximillan II and which Louls 1I has considerably en- larged and embellished, a_new chateau, is In process of erection. Perched on top of a steep peak this Neu Schwaustein !5 a vertible eagle’s nest, but its Interior splendor is not a whit behind that of the Herren-Chlemsee palace, while {he mag- nificence of 1ts throne room is said to even surpass anything that the latter contalns, At Liderhof, which is to the two palaces slready meationed what Trlanon is to Versailles, the king has recently demol- ished & whole wing for the purpose of bullding himself an immensa bed room. like a sort of natural bastlan overlooking the Austrian Tyrol, a glgantic rock, . | provision for the soverelgn, known as the Falkenstein, and on top of this rock the Bavarlan monarch ls building a sort of med::val castle, which he expects to bave completed early in October next, In the same neighbor- hood, cloze to the banks of Lake Plan, and in the midet of a deserted valley, workmen are putting the finlshing touch- es to & hunting lodge, which is known a3 the Hubertus Pavillion. THE COST. OF courze, the cont of constructing these buildings {s simply enormous. 1am formed that some $36,000,000 have al- ready been exponded on them aud still the works are far from comwpleted, The king calls loudly for more money and mesnwhile his credltors—there sre an army of them—are becoming more and mora impatient, Last yesr they made so many threats of exposuro that Louis was forced to negotlate a loan with three bankers of Munfch, who consented to edvance him $2,000,000, to be repald in ten yearly lustallments from the clvil list, but on certain conditicns, One was that the minlster of finances should be forced to hold back the money, and another provided for all the princes of the king's family signing a document in which they bound themselves to pay back the money, if the roysl borrower did mot. When Louis IT, was informed of these condi- tions he kicked up a row that startled ell the nelghbors. He was not the kind of a king who needed Indorsers to his notes and he was 80 angry that he not only d's- missed the intendant who had neg-tiated the losn, bat he did his best to take off the official head of his minlster of fiuances for having approved of such conditions, He, however, took the money and the more clamorons creditors were pald off, but it was & mere drop In the bucket and the king's privy purse remained as empty as The other creditors are now mak- Ing such a foss tha ond losn seems inevitable. Bankera refuse to advance a single addltlonal penny unlees the Bavar- ian parllament authorizes 8 loan and pledges the publlc revenues and the oredit of the kingdem for its payment, and this the ministers bave flatly refusea to even propose to the leglslative body. 1 do not see how Louls II. is golng to get out of the scrape, unless parllament comes s his assistance, and yet it would be very upjust on the taxpayers of Bava- rla to add to thelr burdens in order to meet the debts contracted by a monarch who, If he s not & downright macumin, is certalnly a crowned cravk In the matter of a civil list the constltution of Bavarian contalos a generous and ample 1t allows bim two per cent of the gross revenuee cfthe state, and this produces a trifle over $1,000,000 a year, The king of a small country like Bavarla ought certalnly to manage to get along on euch & liberal allowance for pocket money, Mexlmil- fon the predecess:r ¢f Louls and whose clvlllist was smaller, not ouly kept up & brilltant court and traveled abour Earope in fine style, but made his exiled father sn annua! allowance of $125,000, bes!des which be managed to talt’ away a fow thousands every yesr,so that when he dled after a reign of sixteen years he lefc several million florine to be divided swong his helra, Unfortunately, the kiog does not recm to care much whether h2 1a fn or out of debt and he goes on spending just as If he was as rich as Jay Gould or the Earl of Rotheehiid, The people of Munich are wondering what 1t will all lead to and some of themn predict that we shall soon be reading of no less a rcandal than a bankrupt king failing so miserably flat that he won'c be ably to pay ten cents on the dollar. Failure means his deposition —then whai? Perhaps a regency, who knows? 1donotand I am sure Idon't care very much, except, of course, on the grounds of common suffering; for like Liouts 11, I, too, am teylng > nego- tlate a lo:n to meet pressing require- ments, THE KING PERSONALLY. Very few strangers ever have a chance of seelng this crowned orank of Bavarls, but I saw him last year, and agaln last epring under very favorable clrcam- stances. He Is not a married king and he 1s not likely ever to be. Is It the souvenir «f some early love long lost, some secretly Indulged passlon, or the rocollection of the way that Lola Montez used to drive his grandfather around with s horse whip that has glven him such a hatred fcr womankind? That he has nover even Indulged in the royal penchant for keepirg a mistress Is certaln, and, with the exceptlon of actresseson the stage, ko never willingly looks at & wo- msn. When he ascended the throne he was a handsome fellow of nincteen; he is old and wrinkled now, with a fat round belly, and dresses like a third-rate trage- dlan, and nls ministers soon arranged a match for him with an Austrian Arch- duchess, Heallowed them to open the negotiations and make all the arrange- ments without ri g any objectlons, only stipulating 'a hundred young couple, ail his subjects, should be mar- ried on the rame day and at the same place as bimself. But when it came to fixing a day for the ceremonies he kept putting it off with such periistency that the archduchess finally got aogry, sent him back his love letters and asked her papa’s ministera to find her another hus- bsnd. The Bavarlan minlaters wanted to look around for another woman as wife for their sovereign, but Louls positively rofosed. When it was represented to him that the hundred covples who had boen designated to act as his nuptial cor- tage wero impatiently waiting to be uni- ted he said: **Well, let them wed if they are such foola, As for me, I wiil remaln a bachelor, and I never want tc hear any one talk again about my getting marrled.” A CRAZY FAMILY, It is, indeed, a strange destiny, that of this royal femily of Wittelsbach, the ancestors of which won the crown of Ba- varla by their wiedom in council as well as by coarage in the field. O the two brothers who now represent the elder line, one plays with his crown and sceptre as though they were mere baubles; he conceals himeelf from his people and ruins himself through indulgence in ex- travagant fancies thst border on the va- garles of a maniac. The other is un- doubtedly a madman, and as such ls con- fined in the vast apartments of the Chat- eau of Nymphenberg. Ho was wesk- minded from the start and lost what lit- tle wits he had on the battlefield of Lang- ensalza. The smell of gunpowder, the thunder of artlllery, the rattle of mus- ketry, the groans of tho wounded and the spectacle of the dead and dying was too much for his enfeebled intellect. He suddenly stood up in his stirrups and tried to catch the cannon balls which an Austrian battery wae firing over theheads of himself and staff. At prerent the mad- ness of Princa Otto has assumed the form of fancylng himself to have been tarned by some maglc spell iatoa llon and to suppose that he is shut up In an On the Bavarian frontior there juts out, [y iron cage llke a wild beast. He roars, bo springs about his room, bltes and scratches his keepera. When King Louis feels need of a little excitement to stir m up from his torpor aud ennul he locka himaself up with his brother and_ for hours, until they are both ready to drop from sheer physical exhsustlon, they rump around on all fours, jumplog over the table, upsetting and smashiog the fur- niture and filling the chateau with cries that resemble the roaring and howling of | P wild beasts than eounds uttered by hu- man throats, Ycu might perhaps fancy thero were & palr of kings of beasts be- hird the doors of the room, but you would never guess that such sounds were beiog made by a royal pair who wers bora to be kings of men. Eae S Nervous Debilitated Mer, You are allowea a sree uruai jor thirty days of the use of Dr. Dye's Celebrated Voltaio Belt with_Electric Suspensory Appliances, for the speedy reliof and permanent cure of Nervous Debility, loss of Vitality and Manhood, snd all kindred troubles. Also for many other dis- eases. Complete restoration to health, vigor and manhood. No risk i# incurred. Iliustra- ted pamphlet with full information, terms, atc. mailed free by addressing Voltaic Belt Co., Marshall, Mich, e —e—— Came to Life Again, Mr. Dorrick A. Rauphorn, a wealthy farmer of Orange county, Ind., was taken 1ll several days ago of pneumonia, At G o'clock Saturdsy night tho two physlcians who were in attendance prononncsd him dead, and arraugements were being made to prepars the remains for the cofiin, when all at once the corpse started up in bed and asked for a glass of water. Ina short tlme after drinking the water Mr. Pauphorn breathed freely, and is now declared out of danger. ——— Ske bas the complexion of a peach, Pozzoni’s Medicated Complexion powder did it. Sold by all drugglsts, — —— He Respected Her Wishes, They had come In from way back, says the Pittsburg Chronlcle, In & wagon. He was tall ana agricultural, she was short and rural, He had been buylng some cloves at rotall, and at the depot made some remarks while his meek wife pre- vented the chlldren from getting mixed up with the emlgrants. “I alnt afeerd of tho biggest men that walks,” he re- marked. This sentence seemed to please him, and he repested it At last bis wife arote and sald: ‘‘Pete!” “Eh?" “You knowme?’ *You bet.” “Squat and shut up.” And hedid. — T —— Summer colds are always worse than those of winter, but Red Star Cough Cure will remove them, It 1s prompt, safe, sure. ——— ‘When a couple are engaged in Russia a be truthal feast 18 held, and the bride-elect has a lock of bair cut off in the presence of witnes- ses aud given to the bridegroow, who, in re- turn, presents a silver ring set with turquoise, an almond cake and a gift of bread and salt. Among poor people who cannot sfford silver ard turquoise, tin and a bis of bluestoae are substituted. | — When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria, When slie was a Child, she cried for Castoris, When sho bocams Miss, sho clung to Castoria, When she Liad Clildren, sbo gave them Castoris " BEAUTIFUL SNOW.” Talk With fhe Man Who Wrote the Famons Verses. His Experience With Numerons Other “Authors” of the Poem, New York World, Mr. John W, Watson llves In a neat brick house on Twenty-tecond street. The reporter caught that gentleman by the Inpel of his coat and exclaimed: *‘Are you realiy the author of ‘Beautiful Snow? " Mr, Watason nelther fainted nor exhibited any desire to run away, but braclng himself agalnst the attack In the hall, with the alr of a man who had just bldden thelr enemles to do his worst: *‘I am.” He then Invited the reporter into o coay little parlor and made the follow- ing statement: *‘I am not only the author of ‘Snow’ (Mr. Wataon invariably speaks of the poem by that abbrevisted pet name), *‘but am also the author of ‘The Dying Soldter,” ‘Ring Down the Drop,’ ‘Farmer Brown,' and several other equal- ly well-known poems.” Mr, Watson said, more serfonsly: I have often been asked to write ont my story of the poem, but have always de- clined. The truth s the dlspute, if I may oall It so, has alwaya been an annoy- ance to me, and I have thovght that the beat way to settle It was to let It alone; bat It seems that the ghest wlll not be lald. I do not regard it as a matter of much consequence anyhow, and feol that I have written several es good or better poems, some of which have attalned great popularity. I think I can say with- out egotism, that my poems of twenty- fiyo years ago orlginated o row taste, or school, if you will, of which Trowbridge, Carleton and a fow others are worthy followers. Yes, 1 wrote the poem of which you spesk in November, 1858, at the house of Mr. Sam Colt in Hartford, and malled it next morning to the Har- pers, to whose weekly and monthly 1 eent all my wrltiogs at that tlme. 1t was publiched in No. 100 of the weekly, and 1 RECEIVED $15 ron 1m. That was liberal pay for the time. Tho Harpors are always liberal, and showed 1t ten years after by preeenting me with the copyright of all my poems. In 1868 1 sold it again to Buraer Brothers & Co. of Philadelphia for $500, who pablished itina volume with twenty-five of my other poems, a volame that sold, the pub- lishers told me, 32,000 coples in ten months at §1.25 each. The success was too great for the youthful firm of pub- lishers, for it cansed thelr failure., They wero 80 encouraged by thls, their fiss: venture, that they 1ushed Into book spec- ulatfons that swamped them, and “Snow” passed into the bands of T. B. Poterson & Co. of Philadelphla, who showed thelr appreciation of the author by gathering up enoush of his poems to make a second volumo, altering the tltle of theleading poem, and publlshing them without even complimenting him with a copy, he knowlng nothing of the book untilhe picked it up in a Broadway store. To this day 1 have never re ceived a cent from Peterson nor a copy of my book, though I have received cffsrs from them for a third book, but have re- jected them. “There have been,” continued Mr, Watson, with a mournfal cadence in his musical volce, ‘80 many authors of “Snow’ that I only admlt myself to my- self as ene of them. The firat of these who come prominently to the front was one McMaaters, a portralt painter, who, finding the poem floating about WITHOUT ANY VERY AVOWED AUTHOR, adopted it, although he had never before been suspected of a poetic vein. He got holdof a very gabled copy of it and with a letter sent it to the Sunday Times, modestly admittiog himself the long-sought author.” “What did you do?” ssked the re- orter. *“Well, at first, 1 was dlsposed to laugh and do nothing, but Stepben Massett, who had been reading the poem in his entertainment of ‘Drifting About’ all over the world, and who told me that the poem had been worth $10,000 t o him, took up McMaeters and begged me to go and sze hin. Accompanied by a frlend I did g0, and the fellow repeated his as- sertion to me, declaring that he could produco proofs of 1t In two woeke. 1 gave him two months, and I think he's looking for them yet, Tha's twenty years ago, and L have not heard of him dince. Then new suthocs Aroso on every slde, especlally in the west. Sometimes it was reported that the manusctipt had bean found on the person of a fallen woman who had drowned herself in Cin- and that the parsgraph bad been written by a fellow who claimed to be the author of the poem, and who, having been throatened with arrest for some rasoality, took this brilltaat mode of avolding It."” *‘Was that the end of himi"” asked the reporter. “‘Not a bit of It. A fow months after the paper arnounced that the sathor of ‘Beautifal Snow’ had been arrested for robbing Mr. Page, of the Era, of $300, I had the curlosity to go with a reporter to the Tombs to seo him, There he told me his roal name and history, but denled that he had claimed the verses. How he got out of thi acrape, or what has become of him, I do not know. It ls a number of years einco I have heard of him.”’ *‘I have in my lifetime reen about a dozen authors of ‘Beautifal Snow,’ In ad ditlon to the one I see when I look In the glass, and expect, if I live a litile longer, to seo a dozen more, consequently I do not clalm exclusive authorship but slmply say that I am one of them,” In speaking of the astonlshing popu- larity of “‘Beautifal Snow,” Mr, Watson sald: “‘The last edition of ‘Snow’ hasa note by the publisher which, I belleve to be true, and which saya that ‘Snow’ and ‘The Dylng Soldier’ (the second poem In tho book) had the singular fortuna to be reslted before audlences ranging from 2,000 to 4,000 on the same night in five of the largest cltles In the country."” et~y Mrs. Montgomery, a visitor at Itock Castle Springe, Ky., came to her death a few days ago in a very siogular manner, She was in the sct of taking a drink of water from a bucket on her porch when an ordinary honey bee flew against and stung her upon the left temple Sho foll as if she had heen shot and died a very ehort time afterward. S — A Great Surprise, Ts 1n storo for all who ure Kemps' Balsam for the throat and lungs, the great guaranteed remedy. Would you believe that it is sold on ite merits and that each dinegist is authorized to refund your money by the Proprietor of this preat wondo:ful remedy if it fails to cure you? Schoeter & Becht, druggists, No. 211 15th at,, have secured the agency for it, Price B0c and 81. 7l size frec —— A table submitted to the recent annual meeting of the papermakers in Saratoga makes the showing that the duly capacity in Foands of the paper mills of the country, ac- cording to states, and separated into twenty- four varieties, amounts to a grand total of 8,139,060 pounds, o 1,830 more than the estimate of a year awo, a gain of six and two- HANYT cionati, and again it had been writica by an obscura St. Louls editor, who never wrote anything else, and having accom- plished this retired from the poetry trade, Then Elizabeth Akers and Dora Shaw and Len Faxon, in turns, took epel s at It through the newspapers, not exatly claiming 1t, but giviog it out in a sly sort of way that the author wes not a great: distance off. I beliove the poem has never yet been openly clalmed by any one possessing any literary talent whatever. A man having sensa enough to write an_ordinary poem would never intentlonally become & plagiarist, or lit- erary thief, though he might duplicate thought unknowingly. Bat the most wnderfal of all these fellows, and one who gave me the most serlous annoyance, wi 3l pamed Willam H. Sigour- ney, and professing to be a nephew of the husband of the authoress, his real name I forget. He claimed to be & com- pesitor, and was familiar with all the jalls In the country, for a varlely of crimes, He was picked by the inevitable Massett, who had an sffection for ALL THE AUTHORS OF ‘SNOW' except myself, snd somehow found an indorsement In the Galaxy magezine. On the strangth of this, Slgourney travelled through the country, making addresses at couniry fairs, repeating ‘Snow,’ and awindling the country people out of any- thing he could. The Harperr, I never could understand exactly how, or why, suffered to the extent of $60 by his im- posing on them two pcems, one of which they published, entitled ‘Beantiful Xva,’ and both copied from the English *Gocd Words.' This man ran his career for soveral years, and every littlo while my eyes were gratified by & newspaper para- grrph aunounclng that the author of ‘Beautiful Spow’ had been atrested somewhere for obtalning goods under false pretonces, or for mtealing type, or plcklog pockets, “There waan't much Indutement for me at that fime to acknowledge myself #8 the author, and worss was to come, for one morning while in Philadelphis 1 picked up the Ledger and ssw it an- nounced that ‘the author of Beautifu! Soow’ had shot himself and dizd on the Bloomingdale rcad the dsy befre. 1 was really glad, however, to get rid of the fellow, but on retarning to New York wes disappointed to find that the report had ovizinated with the Everivg Post, i rnAn:M MARK ¥ b g BNA o e Frec from Opiates, Emetics and Poisons. A PROMPT, SAFE, SURE CURE Influenze i them 10il sending one LTR CONPANY, cre. Naryland, V.8, & DOCTOR WHITT A1YaE Chuew A Ziulgen \ Pasitive Writtsn, Guarcanis: "MARRIACE CUIDE stitute teof Iltj- ce sonal or by letter, sa icines sent by Mail a: i package to indicate contents or sender. Address DR.JAMES,No. 204Washington 81, Chicago, il estored ure Decay, Norvous Debilit &c., baving tried in vain every < iicoverod a smplo meanaot soli-curo, Which o will send FREL (o5 310w sufaper: Ve DU REEVER G G ean 80 N Yok DEBILITY wen Prostate Glan h Medicines DY Lhi e ot suretry s onin) MARET Al correspond K] ., Or RESK( AP \hiane 1Atk @pvaar. MEW VOGK. "4 FINE LINE OF Plon0s & Drgan WOODBRIDE e D 6rl THR ONLY EXOLUBIVA MIUSIG HOUSE IN OMAHA NEB. IGE OF LAW, 10WA COLL department of Drako University, Dos Moines Tows. Sond for Catalogue. Addrers A. H. MeVey, Dean or J. 8. (hrk, Secrotary, caro Coe McVey & Claxk, Dea Moir . mé&e 4wki DREXEL & MADL, Svockssors 10 JOHN G, JAo0Bs, UNDERTAKERS At the old stand1417 Farnam Bt Orders by tele ¢raph 8ol cited and prompily eiteuded to. Telepbone 0. 32, RealEstate Bedior d&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 arounc 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, 8t ,Marys and Park Avenues, in fact ‘'on all the best residence streete, 1, We have property in the followingZad- ditiens. Hawthorne.- McCormick’s, Millard&'Caldwell’'s| Kountz & Ruth’s, Lakes, Elizabeth Place’ E. V.Smith’s,, Horbach’s, Patrick’s Parker’s, Shinn's, Gise’s, Nelson’s, Armstrone’s! Godfrev's,i Lowe’s, Kirkwood,: Coliege Place, Park Place,: Walnu&:Hill, West End, Borgs & Hill Capitel, Reed’s First, Impr'nt Association Wilcox, Burr Oak, Isaac & Seldon’s Hanscom’s West Omaha, Grand View, Credit Foncier, Kountz' First EKountz’ Second, Kountz’ Third, Kountz’ Fourth Svadicate Hill, Plainview, Hill Side, Tukev & Kevsors Thornburg, Clark Place, Mvers & Richards. Bovds, A B[ a0 a1l the other. Additions to the City. South Omaha. ‘We nave the agency fo tne syndicate lands in South Omaha. These lots sell from $225 upwards, and are very desirable property. The development of the packing houseand other 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 prices, terms $25 down bulance $10 per month, level ground and are desixable. 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 neen established by the city council, and is very desira- ble residence property, ouly 15 blocks from Post office, prices lower than beaten. For 8, terms. For 8. 11th St., 88,000, aLe—House and lot on 21st St, [Kasy ALE—22 foot on Farnam St., near For SaLe—Lot In Walnut hill, 8200, For Sare—DLots on 20th, $550 each, For SaLz—22 actes with elegant esidence, -| good barn, fine trees, shrubery, fruit, hot an cold water and all conveniencesj first class propert For 18th. Good business property ches ¥on Rexr—Room 44x76,, 8d floor, troot, in every respect. ALE— 66 foot on Farnam street, near ‘on 14th % | adjoining additions for a home or investment. , {iThese lots cannot be For Satz—House and lot, 25th and Ohte go street; splendid corner, $5,600, WE'OH SaLw— First class business block, 845, For Sau bouse, 81,5 FoR 8l tion, $760, ¥on Satk—Lot in Millar® Place, specia bargain. ; Fo 1,2AsE—Fine business property on 16th 8t, and St Mary's Avenue. For SaL 1 lot on Chicago 8t., between 13th and 14, with good houso, $3,000 2 § lot on Wheaton Bt.j goo Fine corner lot in Shinn s add! We will furnish conveyance jfree to any part of the city toshow property to our. friends iy |and customenrs, and cheerfully give' injorma- tion regardingiOmaha Property. Those who have bargainsito offer orfwish property at a'bargain, are invited to see us, BEDFORD & SOUER Real Estate Agents 2138, 14th St. bet. Farnam & Douelas

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