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For sale by Druggists, Grocers and Dealer Price, One Dollar per Bottle. - Sold aly amalod bkl and mome pennine ex- “London"'fi Truuser Strm Patented in Europe and U 8 SoLE AGENTS In UN1TED STATES for celebrated John Hamilton & Co., Stretcher. Takes bagging out of knees, rostores - puntalods {0 Iy pit'd str, rew rod in co) ton with clamps. All others in- 7 W nul and only g Streteher for Gentlemon's use. By ovpress securely pucked pric £ ), Write forcirculars . Ageonts . Q. W, l\lMUN&&(U wanted in Boston, M el o b Ld. Hnun(. lumunl. lfll WABAEH Av., Arfl/iual Limb Manufactur/ng L‘a.. (lucorporated by the State of Pensylvanin) dvery Member of Which has An Artificial Leg. Munufactupe Adjustable Lacing Socket Limbs. orta lh\l‘ and 1t nost o duruble i by nvention authorized to make limbs for soldiors on s, for cafaloguo, s (ull doscrip! 1egs, With nu- s cortifica from al our sgtublishment wo for- ward blanks to take s ures. Artificial Limb Manufacturing Co,,. No 009 Penn St THOMPSON, 8¢ Pittsburg, Pa. oo’y and Business Manager Lw, VOCTOR WHITTIER 17 St. Charies St., St. Louls, Mo, Avising lm“\'lnmmm Indulf Guars Siren every an lciae s6at every where by Eiall of o3 prases w.u.. Wase's B Walisias! i = | T{IE SLOW MARCH OF LIBERTY Tracing the Growth of Freedom Up to the Birth of the American Republio. The English Magna Charta, the Biliof Kights, and the Habeas Corpus Act Corner Btones on Liberty's Pedestal To the kditor of the Ber: In a discus: sion a fow days ago over the disgraceful and unpatriotic courso of the demoeratic party,I was informed for the ten thous- andth time that *“Thos. Jefferson, the father and author of the Declaration of Independence, was the founder and progenitor of the democratic party.” This has been repeated so often by the atic party that it has almost be- n axiom, whilst in truth and in fact the Declaration of Independence was written more than one hundred years before the Fourth of July, 1776, I will not deny that perhaps Mr.Jeflerson was in some way responsible for organ- izing the opposition to John Adams and Aaron Burr to make himself president, by such methods as buying the vote of James F. Bayard (then a member of the house of revresentatives, the grand- father of the present secretary of state) paying for his vote for = that high office. by nominatmg him to- the senate for minister to ¥rance, ana in that way and by such methods well-earned the 1 of *‘Father of the Democratic Party. history of the struggle of the (~nn|hu‘nnl congress in its efforis and the efforts of the people to dissolye their relations with Great Britain, ran through many years dating as far back as 1701, The id set forth in the Declaration of ludependence were not new, and in fact several paragraphs of that great hrotest o be found in the “Bill of Rights,” granted by William and Mary, on the 18th day of Febru 1088, soon after James 11 fled to France, and later than this it passed both houses of par- liament, when William and Mary had been crowned. Whilst on this subject a_full review of the great documents, that might be called the antecedents or predecessors of the Declaration of lmh’] pendence, ehron ologically examined, will fairly illustrate the progress of science of self govern- ment, until wo-find ourself with a system that seems to be theneme of the science, which has done so much to sccure civil and religious liberty, not only in thi country, but in France, and by the ir fluence of which we will one day, not far off, hail Irelahd the secona natural ofispring of the American republic. ‘xlll MAC CHARTA," or great charter obtained by the pzople of ‘England, with arms in their hands against King John, cffort of a |mu}»l«x to ¢ able rights of the Hen man. The second was reign of his son and successor, {11, where this charter with other tions wis cted by parlinment; in in the reign of Edward I, by called ‘“‘confirmatio custorium,” by the great charter is directed to Vo '8liowellias the comuion’ 1w Conles of this instrument were sent to all cathe- dral churches, and it w reted that 1t should be read at least twice each year, that the people might know what were their , and know ing them would — watch with great diligence dj v In the reign of Edward TIL there were several dec cts defining the rights and pri of the subject, touching his dutics and relation to the crown and kingdom, all of them being roachments upon the despotic author- f the crown and beneficial to the cot. The second grand advance towards self-government was in the rgign of Charles 1, soon_ after his coronation. when the “Petition of Rights” wuas drawn up, presented to Charles, and he gave it his assent and signatu It was termed “A l’ArluxuulLlo Declaration of ) the Liberties of the People. This in- strument confirmed to the citizen many concessions, rights and privileges that n before unknown, This was fol- oon after by act that did more to prepare for and establish per: than any that had ever ador) statute book of any countr t that dissolved and chamber, Tt occus unfortunate prince in that rupture with his par (hnany Ahereby he lost his_head. The n et in review of llu of the right ot personal se is the first object of orgar ment, was the enactment of the 5 toindividuals persona Tt was the passage of THE HABEAS CORPUS ACT, pussed the house of commons «n of Chu nh 1L un the 1st 5 There had been fre- nd .|~~\ tions in the house subject, but the bar- which during the day of Apr quent resolvos of commons on thy ar oW to recognize them, but at x]n mu.- it scoms they could not longer resist what the progress of civili- zation demanded with so much unanim- ity through the ne representatives of the people. As a |||uu1 that the slowly over Y S T brother, the duke of York, became King as Jumes 1L This prince had” nardly been erowned when he began series of innovations upon lm written and_unwritten constit tion of kuglun«l He lovied bottomr, kep! than was ne l||||v soned |n ople without due process of and did not vs, and did sred him ex- result of it prince of Orange taw, prorogied parlinment convene them for two many other aels that tromely unpopular, all was that when the came to England he 1est, and nd, Lo dicd some | had an easy con- in exile to his > he ames went King of whe s. ‘Then the aceession nt W |Hm|n and Ma THE “BILL OF RIGHTS.” This stato paper was more an complete than any that had ever been produced. It embodied the ideas that had been formulated and expressed in all the others. lv was a perfeet compi lmn of all charters, grants, resolves and as: surances that were contained in the glish constitution, with new and more r¢nounced cxpressions for eiyil ious liber cerning the Cc he bill of rights™ there has ney any dispute, and that our dec's mdependeace was taken from rights” no one who has ever reu doeuments will deny After William and M. elared king r been aration of he bill of d both ry had been do: nd queen, but before their coronation, parligment’ in behalf of the people who had been so sor demanded some assuranc @ I“Ll oppressive _acts ing k! of the crown, informed them that he was o th will of the pe red he wouls llu'u |l|< question arose who should draw the p.nlw Bentick, who had come over with William, was suggested, but with the keen foresight tliat scems to have guided the prince of Orange in most mat- urged that they selcet some one of their number or some one more familiar with the desires of the people. Then they began to east about among thew- selves. and they selected a man who but a short time before had been & common barrister about the Old Bailey and - Lin- coln’s Inn Courts, and ome authors have denoniinated him as a briefless barrister le, and up to the tyme |h'|l he Nndorr-rl Ifllfl!r‘" 8o famous in the defense of the seven bishops. one of annals of occurs, He FROM PENURY, to a condition of wealth, power. men in the re position until his Rights, " wisdom remains to for its f passed any stato paper of that day. words are munm\hhw. compound and then been adopte tent they are n! this day. and verbs were always used in the per- son and now. And whilst they and not so enphonious upon the ear, yot students of literature in reading eient chi the works of that day, not because they nossess the Groek or Latin there is that definite pression of thought in every word and so much more pleasing than verbos- ity and sentences of doubtfel or susceptible of double eon€tructions. bishops was of itself another strid advance of the old and settled routine, standard and fixed law that not only de! rived so many persons of th ut their lives us well. Thi firmation of the law that n ceriminal cases the sole j and the facts. ury to bring 1n a_verdict of guilty, the ury disregarded the instructions and the court at - once ordered them to prison for coulvm&vt Vaughan was chief justice of the realm, and the jury so imprisoned were released upon & Writ of habeas cor- pus, whereby Vanghan so distinguished himself that he is recognized as a jurist of the highest standard and most mpar- tinl justice. Afow ye: death of Mary,there and essential progress in the direction of } o and it expired in 1693, and was but with about five majorit, 1695, the law whicl N fl!'ll._"‘l‘l‘lxll THE PRESS TO A C before. In a fow days came the English | poct cmum, Covenant et Boat, the Pegasus, | {hore and | the Lon Letter, the London Post, and weekly medium of educs once permitted could not easily until seandals and se of George 1V permanently establi buy up “the whole edition to preven its" circulation, being equal in that peculinr tovie to the seeret history of the “To return to the main question. Tnorder to be convinced how nearthe Dec resembles and is copied from the clm.(nr: gr Constitutiol journal of the two hotses of pa in 1639, and a book called Gra; published about that time, in » 18 the or which ean be found in the congressional library at W be pur o Boston. Tom Pain, was _in continental congress was litterati, independent nature, and being famil with ail this subjeet, at once covies, and this with taken from the bill age American citizen thinks and bolieves, that by one grand great patriotic eflort the Declaration of Independene the Umited State The truth is, a preparing for he predicted that Fr be self-governed, death of 1 tile, the assassination of the Princess De | serted Lambell, an_exile most of the first em- | ¢ pire from the mountains of Switzerland, | of soldic the hither © the borders of Belgium he had seen the aperin London, the London Gazet lizabeth tion ot Ge y of Ap: So it was that the student of the sci of government and tl zation requires no vy THE OMAHA_DAILY i His success in that trial was those ",‘rrkn" in l!m men that so seldom was at once snatched POVERTY AND_PLEBIANTSN affluence and He took rank with the great Im and maintained this death The Bill of the offspring of genius and as unparalleled terseness and compactness of endence of expression, ry production it far sur- The for the use of Tivative words had not to one_tenth the ex The pronouns trav tense literally, not as they are re a little harsh of an- alry, prowess and genius prefer idioms, but and unerring ex- i meaning The history of the trial of the s ir libarty a con- tall, 3 after this, soon after the was another marked Killed rty, and the liberty of conscience. s re-enacted the licensing act enewed, great opposition with only n the third of May, SORSHIP | was but one news- ks nm vard the Inteilizen 1 suppressec h the he Post, the Old - Post | S0t yi Stor tho PosE oY tha. Post Man, all hin three months, 're were one hund sapers in London. the established later, but this great | j; ting the pi been, the works of d with all the y of the court sed, and not sdore Hughe abl, seary for the frie st empire. nd to know how far and aration of Independe overal side of nts and the bill of ngmead’s and, the 1l History of Eng a debates, 1 of which tof those instruments, ever inal ashington. L m,-;nu-m can d of Brown & Littleton, of withor of the Age of and the Rights of Man) adelphia at the time the preparing the fon. He being well known as a and a man above all thing of an - produced similarity of doubt that lependence was hts. The ayer- son, the Crisis Phi the biage and ideas leaves no Deelaration_of [ and the constitution of came into existence. that all the long ntful s that commenced with the reign of nd ended with the inau re Washington on the 30th 1, 1789, on the corner of Nas- 1l streets in New York United State: v and W president of the tl THE BIRTIL OF THE REPUBLIC. s of Awination to and andenr of under which we ors 830, wrote his History of i Revolution, In the Iast page nee must and would He had witnessed the VI, the fall of the Bas ve of the glory wagon the y ttill them the b unks of the Rhine, or from over brilliancy of the first empire refleeted on every sky, he saw the re of the Bourbons to be succeeded by the second | hauled cmpi , and yet he said, “France would be free.” He hived to be in 1871 the first president of the French vepublic only The time had come. Was not | could not stay Columbus, by above the stirs, sent over divided by - beak, to independe the mighty, to shines the sun, 3mu continent, unknown and unt we huve wealth untold, power unlimited and a nation indomitable were the bravest, fr every country. None but the most f less and independent came, and that best SUME POWEr P among or waters never find a country fortitude and plant the rms where might grow and prosper, | 0 towering monarch of nations ast its shadows of influence wherever In less than four hundred , where there was practically a v ¥ lod, | foraf safe. 4 l'lll‘l"_), Our ancestors t and best blood of | or a r¢ blood mingled and mixed up together has | bered, produced u lno ole that no” one of this period ean 1 what they will accom- plish. Patuick O Hawes. | 8 glasses well imbéred and the land good. The began Jutul: pouring out the | buttes ard bare and said to be full of liquor, **vy am I like Grover Cleveland?' | iron ore. A magnificent view of the Bi The bartender meekly said he didn't | Horn mountains 15 obtained from the top know. Heisz liguor an to tell the joke to the lamp-post at the mrm r of Monroe street and sth A policeman were Jacob’s last works as he was shuffled to the basement of the Harrison street station, Chicago News jokes nupti .ll;u-u?II«-i~r~y»'n-gvl- a And it told it in south side Tair, illustration At 11 o'clock dacob stoc a down-town saioon laconically — e Jake Heiszspiegel's Little Joke. Many people peddled touching upon the presidential sssed Jacob that he nearly every saloon on the It was asort of illustrated Jacob himself furnished the is 0 imp; v and timbe, ) head and mueh of the land at the bar of “Schnappes!” he | The announced he bartender put up the bottle and of the “Pecause 1 get full some'’ (here Mr. grand, d 1 ogl*l\\lnkul and swallowed s y.' joke was At 5:40 he was trying The career ot Jacob and his eventful one. avenue, athered him iv like Groyer ‘Vy ain't leveland " Fort N respondence of the B was one of the legends so familiar in the northwest, H however, aff the monume Far from bome and friends, it is true, but ancient eottonwood stands guard over hh lonely grave coyote sing him nightly a lullaby. ley had a bad reputation in e: \\]mn Red Cloud w traveler was always cautioned by the many us forty frontiersmen are said to b fallen there n! different times, vic- tims to the fur Belden went up'}u- nd. just dered by Indians. over again, and they hunted for the bones of the body, but found only a ashes and ono knee joint. been badly wounded by and then burned at the stak Bragley came through skeletons in thi and he reburied them. up we found a piece of board, wh once been part of the tailgate of anarmy wagon. in rude characters, Who 7 his grav. board was I, seemed to be no et the board it when he ire now within six miles of Powder , and the road suddenly turns off y Fork and asce fon is xbmuwl out voleano and the thing Nl vtk stuck up at the entrance of the road to the Bad Lands, and the description given not a ba stained the strip of Bad L’mds we come to the Powder ri about fifty fi rapidly widens asiit_proc Yell Ci owstone, nd the 2 Wt the site of nm Iull Reno. stockade built by Genera Connor in 1865 was stll standing a few yoars ngo. but some of the dilapidated barracks were still ther buttons in"cans showed plainly enough' the use TIHE AIB OF about the spot after day m while the 1 Is. The place wh 1 stood 1on of 42,000,000 of people had been and his hordes of sav ing ground for live of us were now Th loneliness looked at the ruins of the oflic ters we conld not but re ys of 1866, when deli there day aft next their massaered and they themselves prisoners in the h still bore the every o v | day after day in 1 Th river from Rono is a large "| 0ve 0f tonwood trees, burying g aced on s unh~ of the trees DAPPOOSes buried here, haps why the savag lu\\ul‘ river twenty miles to Pumpkin But The stream is tortuous, but ' ||~w| as an observator: dians, and 1t is said that in 1865, 1866 and 1867 an Indian look-out was constantly on these Following the strike out for the three disn; please miles there are ] that i3 good. ' After this streteh is passed BEE: SATURDAY, OF LANDS NORTAWEST The Powder River Re,zim Rich in Mineral and Agrioultural Wealth. t| THE VALLEY OF THE SHADOW. The Graves and Bones of Murdered Whites Mark the O1d Highway— Bloody Work of Indians Twenty Years Ago. 10BRARA, Neb,, May 81.-—{Cor ]-We are now ing over the old government road toward Fort Reno. what monotonous, streams and the soil in the little valleys looks rich. famous Black Hills, while to the left rise the Big Horn mountains. rolling, but the ascent gradual, courso lies over a serios of high ridges, and as we reach the summit we discover they are &purs of the great Big Horhs. n | The mountains are saddle-shaped and in | extend for & hundred miles southeast and northwest, and that is Pumpkin vassed the ridges, which are the spurs putting out from the southeastern base of the Big Horns, Powder river, twenty miles, bringing up against the mountains, scraggy oaks and cottonwoods. trees are_low, squatty, gnatled and con- torted. all right, but lacked moisture to grow up The timber is fit for nothing here but fuel. had cut a bare spot, and on the wood carved in rude lottors, The country is some- but we cross many Off to our right are the The country is Our The saddle has a pommel, butte. Having we cross Dry Fork of It runs down for about It is sparsely timbered with The They seem to havo started out On one of the trees somsbody white “H, N by Indians, August 13, 15 Poor fellow! PS AS WELL THERE, death as if surrounded by ts of Greenwood cemetery. and the Thiis rly days as boatile and the and the ow: nder to look out for danger ve it behind as soon as pos- It is lined with graves, and as avage foes. When picked up s skull near with ‘an arrow head sticking in ind where the loft ear had ow told its own tale—mur- It was the old story vile of Ho had prob- he arrow ke. When he found five valley dug up by wolves, Wlen we were h had still on one was written The blue paint it, and on the oth ACH HUSTED HERE.' ach Husted was or just where for the d there ng on the ground : srave there s low- up, and Zach can find es and putitin the right ¢d hisremains, is really a all hasten on. ds a high Fidge toour W \lnlluv over_the hills we como Tenes, or Bad nd bleak and The Jash-heaps. Not a nd even the jack r: abandoned” thi: is written on a bo; iding hastil r, shallow stream, It runs north and rds toward the ool ford we evel plain and Part of Patrick The tort had been burned, Pieces of blue eloth with brass ched to them, old army wheels and pile ‘of empty. ¢ had been put to, and there was A FRONTIER PPOST It was here on the de- ground Van Voast had sshalled his little 1 unl one by and d i v, lookod on from the flag staft and from which the flag of a parade sin the down at the behest of Red Clond s, Wi our eamp. the night. Therc were W where o regiment ‘W yenrs ago five men enough to make uir of sadness yout this pluce r day, not knowing but the wed ones would be al be nds of a mereiless foe, te worse than death sears of builet m e had been a fortress for a white d man as they fired at each other 8 Powd and rive about is pret twelve ¢ well tim- miles up the ot where the Tndians b d round. The bodies were AMolds or stranped to the Many old warriors, and Indin’ women were That was one reason per »s fonght so fiercely ssion of that valley. Phey will wry their dead a hundred miles to 1 at a favorite spot, and they do . to have their dead disturbed river, I was told, w; Wy from Re well rd all the 0 to its GOOD FARMING LAND. road from Reno runs down the buttes. They loom up dark and and far to the southwest is seen k. ' The buttes in early days by the In- buttes somewher old miht rond we JUNE we find This is Fork as it is now esting story. .| tier and the o thore and finally stroam and valle, communication arrAngom Drawings of The Company and in porson manage and control the Drawinys thoms conducted with b faith toward All Company to use this certifioato, with fac-simiios ofour signaturos attached in its advertisment We, tho undersign pay all Prizes drawn in The Louisiana Stato’ Lot- teries which may bo Pres. Loul 3w, Pres. Pres. New Orleans National Baak. “NFRECE&EA?;FR AT RAC LOUISIANA STAT! Incorporated In 1838 for % yoars by tho legis: tnture for Educationn) and Churitablo purposes with a capital of §1,00,00—to whioh & rosores T fund of ovor $550,000 has since beon addod. By anoverwhelmin ) waa maden part of tho prosont dopted Decemver 2d, A. D, 118 grand single numbor dn\ ing takes place That the lots are one third larger than most others monthly, * It never sonies or postpons That thoy nro backod by & syndizata rapresenting £11.0),10) Look atthe following disiribution: That there hne uiready been expendad betwesn $1.0)0) and 810100, 193d Grand Monthly That there Is fine system of waterworks, furnishing purs apeing watsn AND THR That the railways all conter thoro. EXTRAORDINARY QUARTERLY DRAWING That South Omah b8 & town of itself, That1t hos its own postoiico. In the Academy of Music, New Orlea That 1t has its own Taiiway sation. Tues 1, 1956 Thot 1t Las I8 OWD DEWSPAPOF. Under fhe personal supervisoii and naiage- ment of Grs Bt wn, of Lo In Fact isiana, and JLHM A EanLy, of Vir ginia. CAPITAL PRIZE $160,000- Notice, Tickets are $I0 on Tenths Sl lhss 1 Cavrrar, it 1GRAND PR 1Guany Py APPROXT! 100 Approximation prize 0 i \ o “ 79 Prizes amoun Application for rat only to the oflico of the company in New Or leans. For turther information writo olearty. ving full address. Orders, or New dressed, Or M. A.DAUPHIN, Washington registered et NEW ORLEAN: BABYY! ONE oIt Moy ‘harg, 8 to' L. G. SPENCER'S TOY FACTORY, MADISON ST. CH\CA(.O BESTORED. Remedy Manhood /& v it Yoo, o g 2”! w. red o i bias. ”'i{" fior hia fellow-auerers. Ad REEVLS. 4 O] PILES . urge, 0o Salve no iearn of a simpl J. MASON, 5 snu DRUNKENNESS ©r 1ho Liquo Cared by w0 wicololle wreck dwads of cases, and in Bas followed. ' 1t ne Impregnated with Ui tmpossibility for the FOR SALE BY « KUHN & €0, Co 15th & Cum A. D, FOSTER & FENNYROYI\L PILLS The Origi son.n- y YOOKEAR IAGE Catal all Lt A POSITIVE i the most obtinate caso in four days oF 133 Mlan' sSuluhleMedmaladBuugle; No nauseons dos 0. f price. Fe John st e th-satlymse DREXEL & MAUL, i (8uccesso UNDERI'AKERS AND EMBALMERS. At the old stund, ort_ Phil Kearney, one of lod_posts pulled down Red Cloud. For twenty six bad lands and no water ood water, grass and_timber d river, or (' It is # good valley and full of fine grass and I wildrye. = How it came to have its name changed from Beard or Big Beard river to Crazy Woman's ¥y W CAPITAL PRIZE, $150,000. 1'We do horohy cortity that we supervise the t foF ail the Monthly and Quarterly ork Exchunge i ord ter, currency by express at our ex e P, 0. Money Ordors payablo and addross emedy free by adi “CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH." al and Only G n lar. P, 0. Box 153} . ALIAN CO., 1886, 7y Woman's called on the map: ork is a most inter. this legend of the fron. y woman who once lived gave her name to the 1 bo told in my next Jangs S, Brisat Fine Business Lots at the South End, and ,‘ Beautiful Residence Lots! | In the north end of this Town. Two and one half miles offtee, 1,000 IT.OTS FOR SXILK. These are Quarter Acre Lots. (Taking (nto consideration tho stroats and alleys), and ate sold One Quarter Down, Balance tn 1, 2and 1 years at? por cont. The Finest Suburban Lots, Aronnd Omaha. 250 fest above tha Missourt River. #oma sites for Modest, Medium orltlegant homes. Iuvestigate this and secure sowio of this e property. Before a Higher Appraisement is made. . DON'I' BELIEVE & word ofhis until you have thoroughly tnvestigated it. CONSIDEIR: That this property 1s only two and ono half miles trom OmAkia's busness CanLIr. That the altitude i€ high. That the location Is beautitul. ‘That midplo troes are planted on aach side of tha atrots. That each lot contains 9,000 square foat with 20 foot allay. That the streets are 8 and 100 foot wide, t there are six dummy trains each way, besides tha rogalar tealan That the stroet cars run to within one half mile of thors, That'the strect ours will run thero this ~ ear. That tho price is one third loss than 13 askod for proparty tha 1md dis:an0a (n othar dleantidak om the Omaha Louisiana * Statg Lottory } elvos, and that the same are 1 nesty, fairness and in good rtios, and we authorize tho COMMISSTONBRS. o4 ks and Bankers, will NoWhere o148 about Omana are 100atod auch hand prosentod at our counters J. H. OGLESRBY, slana Rational Bank. KILBRETH, State National B ant. A BALDWIN, TH AN BN inrnwren B LOTTERY COMPAAY. EE g D 0to it franchiso ate Constitution has everything to make tho property the very best paying nvestmant n Raal-wstats tolay, Look Into It. Examine It Carefully Don’'t Buy a Lot. Ontil yor are convinced that thore I8 no possibity of fneurring aloss. Tho handsomo residencoliots nre. one mile this side (directly north) of the UNION S10CK YARDS where are locatod the Immense Dressed Eeet, Halves, $5 . 10,00 50.00 B Torlt Paclkting and 40,000 Beef Canning BEstablishmen 60,00 u;fl;} Which In ten years will be the LARGEST INDUSTRY in the west and will make proparty worth per o) MATION PR £000) ‘What is now asked for a lot. The drainage of the ubove Institutions is perfect and Hows south from vho towa) M puo THE ABOVE DESCRIBED LOTS ARE SIMPLY PERFECT. Any real estate agent will sell you lota. Man with horse and earriago at the Globd-Journal oMoo, att4s “gummit,” South Omaha, has maps and price 1ists and s always ready L show proporty. For furthar ins formtion maps, price lists and desciiptive circulurs, address, M.A. UPTON, Manager, MILLARD HOTEL BLOCK. Omaha, Nebraska. DEWEY & STONE, FURNITURE One of the Best and Largest Stocks in the United States to Select From., OMAWA. NER M. BURKE & SONS, LIVE STOCK COMMISSION MEIiCHANTS, GRO. BURKE, Manager, UNION STock YlfiDS GMAIM, NEB. \||‘n'h|l\h and lln\'ix\I' 11'|!\' Neb.; K ting to 03 to_clubs should bo mado Expross Money \ary h"d M. A. DAUPI NqurI\,lml.LA 0, D. C. 3 NAT AL BANK, w Orleuns, La. CARRIAGES ENT C. O. D. A‘I’ WIHOLESALE PRICE. to Al polngs within 300 ct from.Send two cent Mention this paper, iploself.curewhicl liatharastreet. Now York Clty. supposit ing C* ipriion T a st r llulul, Positively rney N:unn. Columbus State MeDonald's Bank, North | Vational Bank, Omalia, Nel " draft with bill of lading ullndn,-l for two-thirds velue of stock. MAITEEIAMAARNITIO THE BESTTHREAD ron SEWING MACHINES bsolutely 1 speedy stnker or in thou. every insta liquor a ILLOWING DRU . $5th and D ing Sts., Omuha no.. acil Blufls, Towa, et contuining Lundreds oui mek trom SIX-CORD SOFT FINISH SPOOL COTTON —— Full Assortment for salo to the Trade by -— VINYARD & SCHNEIDER OMZATIIA. NEBRASIE A “Chiche Toke o sous” USEDINALL P PANSOF THE WORLD | Display at their warerocoms, 1305 and 1307 Farnam Street, the largest assortment of Planos and Organs to be found af any establishment west of Chicago. The stock embkraces the highest class and medium grades, including STEINWAY, m FISCHER, LYON & HEALY BURDETT, STANDARD, Q_R.,gflA-:L“g LYON&HEALY Pl‘lcaa, quality and durability considered, are placed at the ~lowest living rates for cash or time payments, while the Ionu established reputation of the house, coupled with their most . liberal interpretation of the guarantee on their goods, affords the purchaser an absolute safeguard agalnst l0ss by poseible defects In materials or workmanship. LYON & HEALY, i ) CIN, without ntel medie Octo- One box will cure ot cubebs, copail i to produ or furtho particuiars sent RE. w York. rsto ). G. Ji 1407 Faroam St Orders by sitended to. 1306 & 1307 FARNAM STREET