Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, July 24, 1886, Page 10

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{ 1( THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SATURDAY, JULY 24, 1886, GHO. IN. HICKS, | ‘ REAL ESTATE BROKER, 215 South i5th Street, Opera House Block. Offers for sale the following bargains in Omaha property: Wl now first placed on the marke The finest lots in HANSCOM PLACE, originally reserved by Mr. Hanscom, as the choice residence property of Omaha. Elegant cast front lots, splendid corner lots; just on grade, Magnificent vlow, near streot oars, park, and surrounded by 1son in the immediate vicinity, Will sell these lots at PRICES AND TERMS THAT FLACE THEM WITHIN THE REACH OF ALL who desire ' Hand- of people. Over thirty substantial house ng from $2,000 to $10,000 each, will be built this s beautiful homes and a splendid el ots cannot be excelled, as their location, natural advantages and th rome Homes.”' And for investment, the great number of costly houses to be erected will cause them to advance rapidly in price during the next six months. Also offer 8 beantiful east front lots in Marsh's Additi®n, near corner 25th and Loavenworth, one biock from street ears, pavement, St. Mary's Avenue nd church, covered with fine shade trees; cach §2,800. Seven flne cast front lots in Leavenworth Terr e et — ce; two blocks from Belt Lino railway depot on Leavenworth street; lots around are sell ing for $700 to $000; can offer these lots for a few days only at #550 each. Two south front lots in Clifton Place, three blocks from street cars, one block from Leavenworth street, with its proposed grading, paving and Cablo Line, covered with large oak and maple troes—a big bargain —thoe two at §2,400. Eight lots in Burr Onk, convenient to streot cars and railroad, at $390 to $900. Two lots fronting south on Leavenworth strect, each 61 feat front, one & corner, will be valuable business property in ono ye r, the two for $1,500. Two acres in West Omaha, will make ten ation, splendid neighborhood; lots beyond are selling for $1,000 and $1,200; can sell the two acres if sold at once for $7,000. Some nice lots in Hawthorne, near Thirty-third and Davenport; the nearncss of these lots to center of town make them good lots, high and sightly 1¢ irab) cspecailly de investments at $900. Five lots, one a corner, on Lowe avenue, near Dodge street, high and healthy location, spiendid placo for a home, yery casy torms, only $1,100 cach. Six lots in Hartford Place, just this side of new M. P. dopot and canning facic chieapost property in the market, only $300; $10 down, $10 per month. Two lots, one a corner, in Shinn’s 2nd addition, if sold quick, the two only $1,600. A few choice lots in Ambler Place, Thornburg, East Side, Clark’s Place, Walnut Hill, Washington Hill, West End, Orchard Hill and other nging in price from $2,000 to $6,000. CAN OFFER FOR THE NEXTTEN DAYS THE FINEST EIGHT-ROOM COTTAGE AND EAST FRONT LOT IN HANSCOM PLACE, ON GEORGIA AV ELEGANT NEIGHBORHOOD, CITY AND CISTERN WATER, A PERFECT GEM OF A HOME, ONLY £4,300 IF SOLD QUICK. Also several six-room cottages with cistorn and city water, slate mantels, good location, only $2,250; $250 cash, §25 per month. 41-foot front on Harnoy, between Fourtoenth and Fifteenh streets, at $2,000; first-class focation for business. 66 foet on Howard, near Thirtoenth street, only $18,000; easy terms; splendid site for wholesale er wareliouse purposes. 166-foot front on Capitol avenne, next to Masonie Block. 18 spiendid businoss favorite additions. Also offer a large list of improved rcsidence property, property and rapidly improving; has eight brick stores all rented; can make this the biggest bargain in Omaha if sold soon. Also offer two seotions of chotee farm land in Howard county, noar goed railroad station and St Paul, the county seat, a town of 2,000 inhabitants. No better soil 1n the state; can plow every acres; urrounded by a good cluss of people and cultivated farms. Can offer this land for the next thirty days ata low figure and remarkably easy terms, The above are a few of the bargains [ offer for sale. Investors, and especially parties from outside the city will do well to consult the list of vroperty [ offer before buying elsewhere. " INGENIOUS MECH! 80 Graphophone, a Transposition of Pho- NISM- ] :::;Tr‘;}vfmfi;‘:‘i"“ each mu(“lllnw The ma T grand entry was made, X W neart was hollow; fulse to mo - : ) the show went on JILTED ON lllb “EDDINC DAY hd T have my revenge.” And he r: y trifle, thus enabling a person without many hitches, the ecrowd his gun and pulled the trigger. Cap at home such delightful singing being mightily pleased. After the por- Samuel Opdyke fell doad at his foot, stands about | as Patti would render, or such clocution | How Ho Was Roped Into Investing in a | formance the delay was explained by the | Romantio Story of John Armstrong, the | In relating this tho old man—for ho vt it two. i | o comes o recitations “and danose of | MAJOR ~ BENSON'S CIRCUS. | ™ thirentier Vheagms, one used in making the record | them at and the other in reproducing the sonnd | to enjoy The cylindrical machine § s five or six inches high by eight wide, and we would listen to from Edwin Booth. major at his hotel. The artists, when all . himself told ‘the story—became terrib nography Conveying the Same Meaning. | woighs about ten vounds. There is no bl i One-Horse Show. ready to begin the grand march, had South Carolina Recluse. e R AR —_— skill' used in the manipulation of the ma- Just What You Want. — struck; the clown for more pay, others —— ent fiendish exultation. Al .Illw Sticeessul Results After Long-Con- t'h‘mrr‘.”l?,f'll'r:’u:l;m l“"”:"kl‘)‘lllll!h'll" !)m:l;! I\\ihvu you have an attack of colic, | He Gets Even, Leaves the Circus in Ifm' llmu]pn); :uu:lhv lady riger |'lol‘l" His Murderous Revenge Upon the | that were a moment of sweet rovenge, ) _ accomplished by a crank “of automatic | cholera morbus or diarrhoea, you want . wsband, She became very suddenly N s LIVING THE LIFE OF A HERMIT, i tinued tixperiments Upon Meth | yiotion, Mr. Taintor has exhibited o | the pam relievd at once. Chamiberlaine siadll Ll i G AL overwheimed with confusion at thie il A AL Uil For mnearly flfty years he has lived i ods ot itecording and Re- rreat amount of ingenuity and skill in | Colie, Choler nd Diarrhoca Remedy the Lady Rider Doesn't thought of her loncliness so far aws Home in the Heart of alone in the North Carolina forests. Ho producing Sound. devising the various parts of the machin i immediate § s safe and Return, from home and friends and declared that the Forest, determined, when the servant on that and suiting them to the purpose for nt to take, onl Dottle. AT she could npt undergo the ordeal of ap- e fatal morning brought him the startling which they were designed. 'The instru- e RO e o % 0 pearing in public unless there was some nd bitter intelligence that his would-bo F. 7. Maguire in Harper's Weekly: | ment is a marval of perfection in aceu- In an African Church. The F nnington, I\A-)v Moyflm corre- | man to whom she had a right to appeal Newberne, N. C., Correspondence of I violaied her promise, to for- One of the most brilliant conceptions of | Tacy of the movements of all its parts South Corolina Correspondence Beth- | spondent of the New York Sun writes: | forprotetion. The major, who bocame | the Philadelphia Times: Tn 1815, justsov- | ever turn his “back on humanity. The DS G A8 IA " 1A Son SWas tiab &/ ¥ebord Upon a diapragm three inches in diam- | johem (Pa.) Times: The pre 's desk | Major Benson, the hotel-keeper, never | fairly wild, fixed matters with the others, enty-on vs agro, John Armstrong was | cabin in which he lives he built himse]f, it was a more diflicult ma Itisin the gloomiest and remotest soli cter a steel point is attached, which cuts | was hung with white eloth trimmed with | had any idea that he would become a eir- | Put With 1 TRHB L U 1 A for th ude o e forest, and were it not for the could be made of sounds, from which the | minute hairline in the surface of the | 4 black border. T L st it ter. She would not recede from her ulti- | born near Wilmington, in this state. He rounds could be reproduced. —After con- | wax eylinder upon the - agitation of the | THAINI 7 td% ) Labby "was | CUS proprictor and manager, and proba- | yyutum, which was that no dignity less | Was the onlyson of a well-to-do farmer | ittlo garden he cultivates, thus ovideno. siderable exveriment Mr. Edison invented | diaphr l""" by a sound. The indentation L, This was the preachin’ aftah the | DIy he never would if he had had his own | august than that of wife of the proprictor | and received an ordinary common sehool | ing the existenee of civilizition, would by the instrument known tie world over as 1]«];:[))1:‘:{ l("li‘:t“\‘t‘i':‘)l‘n:"( m:l;‘re p’;rz«;m:‘\‘»ln‘ h“,.“m”) ; T way about it; but he did, Illx|||(1|4~l'|'hy ;;: «(_ih;;-HIl‘lU.fi \tv:ubg ]\;.lm‘.;lry dl:c-r “:1(:;;:( lllll;: education: At twenty years of age he n|\>x|n” aho -‘mql;vull n .»mh’vmm-q to achine | ! yo! 80 Iec 2 one over ‘Whahsumeber de kahkus (earcass) o ang; e which has excited i Vi 11JO B yie S o f o 2 A% vord the society of o as choas p 4 the phonograph. This little mactine | e Y again, and ave Just a3 perfect 45 | daynn thore) shals o S NE EanE :\‘.y‘:\‘fi:m nn}w“fil:. l:,:;:,:-‘ “,;:l, thistomh | fricnds. A justico of the peaco was sent "f“"[“l"(,"’f“."_":“"l ‘;f & youngwom ant il is Gronotingly anhoyall tias i 3 consists of a eylinder about three inches | thoy were at first. (ither) demsels togedah, - 1o, you g | omm e O e or raniong | for, Dicked' out of the nssemblage as u | Ramed Carrio Scott, daughter of a farmer | iging place has becomo known. Ho in diameter, covered with a low Upon a eylinder six inches in length by | gl dayah, doan you let dot egul man, who had passed the greater part of | yytter of fact, and the two_were made | Wito came from Virginia and who pur- | was accidently discovered by a party of spiral groove, upon which is pl ninch and quarter in diameter one 18 | Goteh you, Dat egul he a-comin’, a-com- s life on the frontier, and, notwith- | one in the dressing room, Senora Inez [ chased the land adjoining the farm of 5. Hels still vigorous for his foil. The cylinder is s | enabled to rol'ur:ll_l\t least :ms mln‘nm- ' [in’, a-comin’, 'n" he tlon down on de | st nding ln.~_m-.-n)y;umu a hsm-l keeper, | being gor, [mnfly arl nyn‘w] in r d “,""lf(f Armstrong’ her. John's lo emed | and although his hair and long flowing will travel Liorizontally bao he nder holder s | mizzabal kahkuss, 'n scoop ‘em up, 'n | the only business that he claimed to un- | and spangles, and the major in his every- | 44 o vociprocated and he lived on in | Peard are as whito as snow, he walks or forth by Vot ; g i h 5 c oint at one end | rin off wid 'em. Rin away from ’em, my | dersts ining. S ade | day costume, with a big felt hat pushed erect und with an clastic, bouyant step. ncans of o soreav, and is operated by a | and ean be casily UEHEAIEER aah CERIIEN o 2 dagah (cheron - Doan you dy | derstand was wining. He had made | pigCon his head. Thess fow prelimm- | blissful anticipation of the future bkl d ; A When he does condeseend to talk he i crank. The sounds are communicated to | the hollow eylinier to be rapidly shvped | abil of you'll’ countorfeit ail do 'good— | MOneY in the hotel lme, and had lost it in | y3jos “arranged, the performance w For (wo years he was assiduous in his | eheerful . © wntoin m:g“illl\\ B the tinfoil by asteel point attached to a | on or off % vou'll counterfeitit all, bredren—counter- | Mining, but he still insisted t opened has been stated. attentions, and the wedding day was | cony ion, but studiously avoids diaphragm that is agitated by the sounds | Lhe disk macline probably has seme | foit it all. ' Dayah amloue kahkuss less | ards the latter he was a sharp. " Speaking with his friends on the sub- | finally decided upon, There wasno hap. | any . re Pt AT NCn LRAAUET 6 biba, to which advantages over the cylindrical machine, | wid us all, heah, dis mawnin’, bredren— |~ About a month ugo two young men ar- | ject, the major said ho tiought a mean | pior man in the state of North Carolina | 0% 1l avers that he has 1t hy Y g d U not seen or spoken to a woman for the ‘n_of him, but At e i g e he felt that it than John Armstrong. The eventful ds t th 1d has never seen i it the poople | Arrived. John arrayed himself in his i Ot LSt boAE M H o DD SE ¢ support. This | wedding suit, and, in company with a ively litle of the incidents of et that _the record 15 | one kahkuss less—great groans and | rived here with a one-horse cireus and | advantage had been ta irface, and appears in | gighs—“fur whahsumeber de kahkuss erallabocimanstoltorei frominming || cuatiniview b i 1line. For the pur- | am, dayah am de eguls a-floating | 3po o0 ghons i i rords and possibly for | 5y A val Sereres! which they elaimed to own. Ast put A LoUnCy yal o amo A pemtentiary |y, yith the major they naturally inter- tached a mouthpicce. The concussion of | mado upon a flat the sound-waves striking npon the dia- | the form of a spir phragm forces the metal noint forward, | pose of copying r should giv ORI in contact with the tin. | Preservation, the flat surface i1s probably Il true believeps. Fur dem f: QNI DT | they did for a week, when, with a re few invited guests, set out for the [ day life, going on n the outside which s alrendy in contact With the tn- | g, orior buf as each machine ' has ad ernitude shell also rise in materni- | {3ted him in when he | /00 troupe, he took the road, leaving | of hi ; o L R D G foil, and makes indentations as the cylin- i ey § S ! began to be elamorou cttlement | & 2 3 " S [ of his expected bride. On the way he g : ) i 5 n peculiar to jtself, it is a difficul- | tyde—cries of “Da’s so!’ “Da’s ji R Eri A oReAIbilIBNth ey NobRRE e Y | the hotel in ch of the hostler. Wor Tt B ColomRaibak o an | ligious and scientifie works and an ar- der revotves with the movement of the | matter to judge which will prove the su- | rightr *“Amen!” *Bless de Law!"— | °f certain board bills, they sou; s > OPCIL | ) South the cireus stopped for a day or met by a colored servant, who, in o | y6ntstudent of natural history. He has crank. perior for all purposes. “Pooah Sister Liddy!"—Long-drawn no ations with him Tor the sale of | iwo at cach of the several small cimps | feW words, told him that Miss Carrie had | magnificent collection of specimens in In order to reproduce the sounds the | Either ot these machines is in a condi- | of woe from all the eangregation in per- | fooss (" PG CoPLY, y had | \ween here and the international boun- | been married at 8 o'clock that morning | the entomological world,embracing bugs, dinphragm is replaced to its point of | tion at the present time to do the starting and the stéel point goes over the | uensis work usually done by stenograph- record, following the pathof the indenta- | ers. For instance, any one may sit be- tions made on the tinfoil upon the rota- | fore the graphophone and in ordinary man- “Qh-h- ct harmon ypul Lyddy!” with accompanyi crescendo burst of woe on the same tone s n” his tine, and after he had investigated the matter thoroughly me satistied that they had some- h. Noticing that he was s ““Dat poonh dary, making money at | crossea over into Mexico, where i movements were lost track of. Yesterds the major returned, rather flush of mone 1, and then | to a northern gentleman named Samuel | beetles and buttertl 1 n tell cor its | Opdyke and had started on a wedding | rectly the name and habits of journcy north in a carriage. sect native to the neighborhood. For 'a moment Armstrong was par- | also an expert with the pen knife. Since tion of the eylinder. The point agitotes k his daly correspondenceinto | 4 the preacher’s—"She done gone up on un\u:g]nmru“o.l‘ zlu}:‘_“l:.n: |||];)|.u“1llw,;(. and seemingly well satistied with himself. | alyzed with astonishment, but presently | his abode h: become known the boys the d \)l i, which in turn agitates the His™ letters can then be | pight"—<Oh-h-h-h! Ab-h-h-h! Oh-h-li-ht» | oD ‘-““"; oy Ll e i e | After dispensing hospitahty in the bar- | recov selt-possession, he looked | bring him tol s, ete air in the tube, and the repetition of the a co]l(} who ean write from | on still higher tone, base, tenor, soprano """" CALOR -“)"”.‘_”“”_‘[‘)'""”m_j ."J“l' 1 ’\-Ti | room for some time, H... ook his place in | about him upon his wonde up of change for what he gives them cr sound is thereby reproduced. ¥ on of the muchine. and alto harmonizing beautifully in most | P19 31 ‘h‘l‘!_;'.fi t‘{ fl 5 ':I‘[;‘;” 0,“ . | the center of an admiring crowd and | sympathetic spectators. without S b ., which o { Several hundred of the machines 1t mechanical contrivance the | plaintive minor chor “She " couldn’t ‘“"f‘j,i”“] P LR O T-I e SO iontd uttering a wor to his | fri of bones. he carves with ! above deseribed were put upon the mar- r is enabled to take as many | gben walk heah!'—“Oh-h-h-h!” Ah-h-h- oy ("’l“,“‘ D |~ “T made myself wholo and cleaned up | horse, and, leaving his till in the dinary knife file, though the & M ket and quict n number sold, but the tatime as heecan conveniently | 1 “Now she kin flew!” Tk ipe e i $700 on that Gireus, bogs. She's over im | road, soon disappeared distance. | work is slow and tedious. = Ho is con- phonograph failed to make a , for | remember, and should he forget any part | By this time the proacher and congre- | fisappearer and. the next day th | old Mexico now, pointing south. They | He was never seen agam in theneighbor: | templating moving to more secluc the reqason that the machine was not only | of the seufence, by a slight’ pressure of | gation are wrought up to the highest | [0 nimself with 4 civeus on his Struck hore and T steack over there. 'l | hood, and although every effort was rs and it willnot be i Although he began tosuspeet tha it was s fortnight before he d that the/mine had been salte ibout ably proved futile, and finally the | for John Armstrong in vaim. of mechanism, frequently | the fin o discover his wh roon & rod running alongthe | Siteh of exciten base of aclumsy pic I getting out of adjustment, but more es- 1 h nt and the sermon is o they | some fine morning the boy: the machine the veproducer ill | Jiterally chanted in the weirdest of mei- | 10t HEht tellyou how it happened. As soon as1got | mac the show over the line I mapped out a [ 1NV z pecially because of the fact that the sur- | repeat the sentence odles: tho whole conzregition, between. | S : ne had be Lt e ol tald e arbsvdl | community settled down to tie belict that ———— | face upon which the record Should a-correspondent also have a | each rhythmical pause, bursting forth in | 4N that tho circusamen wore s brace of | i [PV i 1 aead awnile. Pro- | he had committed suicide. Fish Stores. 3 | was pliable and likely to be : graphophone, tho writer of tho lotter | ilenrt ronding wail, wild, yot Sigularly | For¥ enteprising swindlers, e o | {0 880D i of Tobbers, 1 toli A MURDEROUS RE James Smith, of Clark bor, N. S., | by a mc cidental pressure upon it. could in a few moments dictate wh musical. L N SOERIFAING Y arg hem that I had sent my money ahead. 1 e LLatal _ | caught a fish and found in its stomach a eyl ibil f makinga | would make a lengthy epistle, encl dimensions, and as he had sufiéred so | them that Lhad sent my money ahead, ) d away and the cireum 4 , | Bolicying in tho possibi O bty e et At the close of the sermon the preacher | 1 uei'it ocourred tohim that pe and that at certain poin{s which T named, was forgotten. His father and : lowed. LI O G angunro:. Sh oo BontEloRiEe 0 g oLy gave out the “leben huncr’ an’ fity™ | )it vun it o while and get his money | I would meet them and pay up. 1 knew | motherhad died, and, although John 8 and Alexander Jamos sounds, Prof. Alexander Graham | *pill box,”” plac by atamp, sieroon hymn, two lines of which the congrega- | o050 ¢ 1 mighty well that ashow that could hy as the legitimate heir to the estate, an | caught a forty-pound catfish in u sub- BllSDENCIRY el A dl1andBMEY ftransm bl hroighioEsimat s eI tion sang, with unconscious blasphiery, | @K 0TIk 06! e concery showed | in Mexico now would do so on for | unclo took chargro of the estate until he | merged hollow Log in a stream near New | ERmnSoinariasool ol Sthameuly el Hoanodon voansinitis b pld0ad. 10/ as follows ol R on hand: One ducit | there isn’t money enough down their to | shonld be found, One duy during the | London, Mo. More than one thousand together, under fhe name of the Vol d upon his graphophone Il meet my sweet Exeuser there, dated tent, o1 300, with scats, poles | wad a gun, and iny aim was to ret rid of o federal oflicer, to esci) pounds of fish have been caught i this Laboratory association, and_established | listen to the letter of his friend with his Andtellhaate 1 . \ soats, b hollow log during the lust throe y y'of confede in a swamp. In o 4 & and cordage to matoh; two wagons, four | the thing before it put me in the hole. The next hymn contained the follow- | mules, one horse; one clown and general | Well, 11eft the show in charge of the w erved, thereby avoiding tie and 10ss of time consequent, a laboratory in the city of Washington, | yoice pre one of the principal objects of which was | vexation v, took refuge nder- C: n Levi Shields, of Corydon, Ind. x ! ing line: i St T athlote | woman and went ahead for v, bill- buek he became bewildered and 3 b aavih ikl CoaoNE Wiha pXperime! sthods r upon an encounter with bad chirography. | ™8 SR L 3 tumbler, one lady performer, one athlete | Woman g ! c £ ¢ carp pond near his house I i Sonna A tier sevoral | O of the oSt novCL And Ihicrias | DS spake the Shorif, and forthwith. | and trapeso porforiner and o boy who | Ing it in three or four places, and then I penetrated sill decer i the gloomy. ro inis to food tho fish ho 300s to tho ; o i f 5| When “collection time” eame the con- | con'd do_various 1. Their just about at | cesses of the great fo Summoning the | slid for Amori i ‘ gregation melted away in a very sur- | artists before him he informed them that, 1, to-day, where they won t tuke 11}111 came face to face with prising manner, some people sliding out | in view of the debts of their late employ- r, but they Il keep on until the mid- | an ordinary shotgun. of the front, others out of the back of | ers, and in obedience to the customs of | dle of next week, expecting to see me. By “Hullo, stranger, wio be you?” the chureh, most mysteriously the country, he had taken possession of b in | A Soldier who has lost his w: st. e suddenly | pond and vings o small bell. ~ [nstantly man armed with | the rts of the pond star nd gather numbers near where they " re- | for food as it is thrown to them. turcs of this machine is 1its ability to years of experiment the inventors of t | Zraphophone now desire that the writcr the sounds of & number of volc shall introduce to the world the results | speaking at the same time; this is done they have obtained. on one instrument, by onc phiagm, shophone' is a simple | one metalic point, and upon a smgle The word *'gri | ine e ) [EEhATRIR EIOrS Bl 3 r transposition of the word **phonograph,” | How it is done finds an explanation in tl T TS the i id would thercafler run it to | tho erowd to buy i inc alinndithoy IEbe | plicd the offi ing that conce A porpoise was shot by a and 1s-intended to convey the summe | fact that the different tones of tl A Most Liberal offer. suit himself, If they wanted to stay for | brokenub worse thi R | of his position was impossible board a vessel just outside the Galveston meaning. . 3 vibrate with unlike speed and force, The Voltaie Belt Co., Marshall, Mich., | awhile until he learned the ropes he “But what about the women—your “Notone 0’ us, 1 guess?” queried the | harbor. The vessel was stopped and tho would continue themin their old places | wife?” some one asked. porpoise was sceured by a stout nooso y them th wry regularly, All | “Woell, as to that,” replied the m of the federal | around its tail and left hanging over tho ship’s side, head down In the water, Within fow moments a huge shark made a rusi for the porpoise and bit it in tin- | thus make different impressions upon the | offer to send their celebrated Vol foil presented a surface unfit for the pur- | diaphragm, and move the metallic point | Belt and Electric Appliances on thirt) an e ] t Pose it w alled upon to fultill, beeause | in a different way, so asto makea record | days trial to any man afilicted with | md ted an eagerness to remain and | I can't say, but 1 1_1 gamble you som of its vliability and destructibility. Many | of the various sounds. The diaphragm | nervous debility, loss of vitality, man. | the major announced to his friends his | thing that you don’t sée her again. and elnborate experiments were made to | of this machine, like the drum of the ear, | hood, ete. [linstrated pamphletinsealed | burpose of continuming the show as soon | andT didn't hitch. She wanted to m Mr. Sumner ‘Lainter soon saw t I am an offi I'm mighty strong [ discover a substance upon which a per- | can receive and 1ecord distinetly the va envelope with full culars mailed | as he could make the necessary arrange- | tight rope performer out of me and I [ What might ver nam two, although several shots were fired, fect and durable sound record could be | ious sounds of a quartette of singer free. Write them at once. ments for a change of pro, For | swore that if she ever came here I would SSamuel Opdyke. | In a'short time the shark made a rush for made. Mr. Tainter conceived the idea | The graphophone 1s now prepured to - a few days he was busy, but at length the | make a cook out of her. In other words The man started back and cocked his | the remainder and bit it in .w,,;‘m of using a surface upon which the sound | represcnt all moods; it will tell you a A Milwaukee man opening was fixed and a big | I convinced her that instead of marrying | gun. **Opdyke—Opdyke—the scoundrel | above the tail, which was left hangfng, who married ¢ cerowd was present to see what sort of @ | mein into the show busine rric Scott and destroyed I'wo pistol balls were fired into its how i and lau record could be cut, instead of indenting | funny stc h with you m veighing three pounds in Okanche e, ught o black bass | Night for the | | a soft and pliable surfac done in the | ural tones; it will repeat a tragedy tl Wis. Ho cut open the bass from the gills | how the major ntended to mak :d herseli out of it, provided she in- | my happiness.” 3 3 at short range, but it swam away ;;.L;ffm\ machine, Tt was linally decided | is blood-curdling in fts nature; it w ' downward, and then held it in the water | After waiting for half an hour past the | tended to stay married, and that is all 1 did marry @ Scott, married her | and appeared to he unhurt upon to uso & paper surface couted with | you a loye story with all the ardor of & | amoment. Tho “split’ fish spr vay | time appomted for the ovening, there | there istoit. * I'm whole and the next | because Lloved hor. But who are you - a prepavation composed of wax and par- | wooer: it will 8ing you an Irish song, or | from its captor and swam off, threatened to be ariot in the tentif the | cireus that comes along will steer el Ih:\t_\ml“ should get so excited over'the . No Uncertainty. afline. whistle a selection from the “Mikado.” | g beneath the surt performance aid not begin at once, and | of me or get into trouble.” matter? i There is no uncertainty about the The graphophone is made in two 1t is expected soon to be able to repor- one of the artists appeared in th g The major’s adventure has been the Me—me-—-why, I'm John Armstiong, | effect of Chamberlun’s Colic, Cholorg long enough to announce that ther been an unavoidable delay, but tha ything would be n reudinass, talk of the town to-day, but the opinion [ wha f 'ar gal, and she vowed | and Diarrhoen Remedy. No one neod side of the hotel is that he will see the | she lov ¢ than anything else | to suffer a single hour if they will take woman again if the roads continue open. ! in the worla. she deceived me; her | one or two doses of it. FOR SALE. 186 feet on 24th st., corner Douglag $23,260, 44 foot on 24th, near Farnam, 6,600, ords upon n | duce correetly the songs of great singers, | T wasall run down and Hood's upon a disk the tatio dialogues, ete., of | rilla proved just the medicir stinguished actors, and by a process al- | writes hundreds of peopla, forms, one to make the oylindrical surface, the other up or flat surface, the' same principles how- 9 Lot on Dodge, corner 26th, B0x148, 3 i & $3,000. =y " ! ; : Lot on Do'g, 060-feet front, corner, b : ”, $3,000, 48 foet on 2Gth street, near Dodge, $1,600. 6-acre lots in Karcam Park, $126 per acre, Easy terme, The lols in this addition are large, 50x130, with beautiful wide street and 14-foot alleys. 3. N Stock of clothing and furnishing geods in good locatiod ‘or s:le «x ex- change for Omaha reel estate, Schlesinger Bros. Real Estate Dealers, 1018 FARNAM ST and you can have your choice of lots. sy ---$25 to $50 down, balance in monthly payments. SCHLESINGER BROS,, REAL ESTATE DEALERS, I0I8 Farnam Streel. This beautiful Addition is one of The Best Iocated BUR In order to give parties of moderate means an opportunity {o secure a good Lot at a low figure, we will for a short time put these lots on the market at the low pricesranging from Call ea Terms $250 to $350 Per Lot. And lies due west of the city. HARRISON A DAMS 2 "IIH 2 MONRO MADISON WASHINGTO VAN A S AN

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