Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, February 17, 1887, Page 5

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————— THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: THURSDAY, DOINGS 1N SUPREME COURT, ‘nny Interesting Decisions Handed Down by the Judges Yesterday. A WEEK'S ADUOURNMENT TAKEN. Pinor Notes From the State House— How Derelict Printers Delay Reports—The News of the Capital City. H [FROM TITE BEE'S LINCOLY BUREAT.] The supreme court yesterday com- Pleted its session for the week. The nsual weekly complement of decisions was handed down, vrincipally in cases from the Second and Third judicial districts Among the decisions filed were the fol- Jowing: Viilage of Weeping Water vs Reed. Error from Cass county. Reversed and remanded. Opinion by Reese, J, 1. The seal of a not contains the words *‘not name of the county for wh appointed, and the word. “Nebraska,"’ is sutlicient for the authentication of his offic Scction 5 of chapter 61 of the compiled statutes of 1555 does not require the name or initials of the no tary be engraved in the I. The provision of the section concerning the N Is of the nawie of the no- permissive only, the year 1865 the owners of th 1 the land upon whic now stands to be sur- veyed as a town site, and in 1870 the plat orded. All the owners gigned and acknowledged the plat, ex- cept one whose name igned by an- other of the plattors as “‘attorne, The person whose name was thus signed, but who did acknowledge the pl terwards conveyed to a thira party his interest in the town site, excepting certain Jots and Dlocks as designated by the plat. His grantee and all others have at all times recognized the validity of the plat. Held, thut under the provisions of section 115 ot chapter 11 of the comuviled statutes, the exccution and recording of the plat sufliciently complied with the provisions of seciion 42 of chapter 53 of the revised statutes of 1866—as amended by the act of February 8, 1 and that by the pro- visions of secjion 43 of the same chapter the recorded plat wus equi deed in fee simple from the propri to the public of all portions ot the p Jund dedicated to the public use. 3. Where, in such plat, a square muarked aud de gu:m'«‘ thereon us lege Square,’’ the lots in adjoining block: abutting thereon, being only half the siz of other lots i that part of the plat, and 80 laid out as to front the square, and held at a higher valuation by reason thereof, in order to secure compensation for the lund inciuded in such square, it was held that there was a dedication of the College Square to the public, with u right to the use thereof for the purpose ofan institution of learning so long as the user continued; the title remaining in the public, as represented by the mu- nicipal corporation (after being incor- rur:nmh for t use, and ejectment will 1 to remove any person unlawfully in Possession 4. Where, in an action of ejectment, the defendant in possession of the real tate, the subject of the action, reliesupon the statute of limitations as a defense, the burden of proof ison him to show that his possession has been continuous, ad- verse, hostile and exclusive during the ten yoars last preceding the commence- ment of the action. Jacobs vs Morrow. Error from Douzlas county. Aflirmed. Ovinion by Maxwell, 1. On an appeal from a judgment of a probate court in matters reluting to an estate, where the judge upproves the bonds for such appeal, it will be pre- sumed the bond conforms to the order of such court, although they do not appear in the record, 2. Where a bond for an within the time required b, hus been duly approved by the proper oflicer, such app .|ll will not'be dismissed, salthough some of the formal requirements of the statute have not been complied with, if the defects can be cured by amendment or the filing of & new bond. 8. On an appeal from the judgment of a county court overruling an exception to the account of an administrator, the dis- trict court may hear evideneo and deter- mine the validity of such claim. 4. Where the administrator of an es- tate who had given bonds in the sum of 10,000 and had collected and held in his ands more than $12,000, removed and the ole surety of his bond appointed administrator de bonis non: Held, t It was the duty of such admnistrator de bonis non to charge himself with the pen- ulty of said bond as assets in his hands belonging to said estate. In such case the chose in action is converted into a chose in bossession and is transmitted by the mere operation of the law, which is pquivalent to a judgment and execution, Btate ex rel Davis vs Forney. _ Original ap- lication for mandamus, Writ allowed. Dpinion by Cobb, J. 1. When, m a new town, erected by the county board, in the division of the count¥ into towns, or townships, at th first meeting of said board, the oflices of the town board as well as the town clerk are all vacant, it is the duty of the county clerk to fill such yacanel s well as all other vacancies in the oflices of such town by appointment. State ex rel Francel vs Dodson. Originalap- plication for mandamus, Writ allowed. Opinion by Cobb, J, In an action by mandamus, where it appears that the offica of clerk of the distriet court of 8. county became vacant by the removal of M, more than thirty s before the general election of 1 that upon the canvass of the votes ¢ at said election ¥, the relator, was de- clared duly elected to said oflice, which faid canvass aud declaration is duly evi- denced by a certificate of election, issued and delivered to F, under the hand and oflicial seal of the county clerk; that said ¥. has taken the oath of oftice and filed the bond as required by law, which bond was duly approved, and has thereaftor demanded the said oflice and the books nnd papers belonging thereto of D., who had been appointed to said office by the board of county commissioners, which was refused. Held, that a writ of man- dami s would issue without inquiry as to the form of the notice of said clection, or of the ballots cast thereat, of Blair vs Lantry. Appeal from Wash- ton county. Judgment dismissing the aetion as to Farr reversed; and judgment entered azalust Farr and Lantry for $716.66, provided the city shail execute and deliver'to them a duad conveying title of eity to land in question, Opinion by Max- well, Ch.J. 1. The city council of a city of the see ond class, or any committee or member thereof, officer or department of the cor- poration cannot wecur any expense or enter into any contract, whether the ob- ject of the expenditure shall have been ordered by the city council or not, unless an appropristion shall ve been pre ously made eoncerning such expense except in cases where the proposition has been sanctioned by s majority of the logal voters of the eity, ete. Where the mayor and eouncil of a city of the second class drew an_order upon the cemetery fund of such eity for $716.60, there being at the time $1,000 1n such fund in the treasury of such eity, and applied the proceeds to the payment of lands purchased as an addition to the cemetery of such city, but no appropri- tion had been previously made concern- ng such expense, held, no act of ratifica- tion being proved, that the mayor and slerk wero liable for the awount. drawn on such order, YESTERDAY'S PROCEEDINGS. Court met pursuant o wdjournment. v public_which ial seal,” the ch Le was Camden J. Garlow, Bsq was admitted to practice. Bell vs Arndt, motion to dismiss oyer- ruled; Sells vs Haggard, motion sug, dim. rec. overruled, cause argued and submitted; Oberfelder va Kavanaugh, motion sug. dim. rec. overruled; W ern, ete., Ins. Co, vs O'Neil, revived the name of the administratrix tion to dismiss overruled. Motions for rehearinug were overruled in the following causes: Cheney vs Harding, Shriver vs8 McCloud, Stude- baker Bros. McUargur, Griffith ys West- tern, ete., association All causes from the Fourth judicial di trict, not otherwise disposed of, wer put at the foot of the general doc Court adjourned to Tuesday, February when the docket of causes from the Fifth judicial district will be ealled. a STATE HOUSE NOTES . The articles of incorporation of the Sutton Exchange bank, of Sutton, Neb., were received by the sceretary of state yesterday, The capital stock of the bank 13 §25,000, in shares of $100 cach, the in- debtedness of the institution Limited to two thirds of the stock. J. C, Merrill, J. H. Woodrull, F. J. Hoerger, E. W. Wood- ruff and C. K. Williams are the incorpo:- ators, Governor Thayer has appointed O. 1. Willard, of Sherman county, as an addi- tional delegate to the Ameriean agricul- tural conventon to be held at Lake Charles the present month. Tue sheriff of Hamilton county was at the state house yesterday procurring requisition papers, going eastward to 1liinois on the night train. A LONG DELAYED REPORT, On the 1ith of December the contracts were let for printing the various reports of the state officers, and it was supposed that the work would be done so that the reports would be at hand at the assem- bling of the legislature, N cipal reportt were 1. a good deal of inconvenience was acea- sioned by the delay in furnishing them, A vigorous prodding on most of the state ofticers brought out the reports during January, but now, with the session with only about ten remaining days, the report of the secretary of state is still slumbering at the Omaha Republican job rooms, and ex-Sccretary Roggen is becoming indignant over the delay. The report wil present rate of speed be out sometime inmidsummer, ABOUT THE CITY. The recent real ests those who ought to know to sale of four lots on P street and Seventh street to tl. T. Clarke, of Omaha, for a consideration of $15,000. 1t is also stated that Mr. Clarke has purchased two lots on the corner of P und Eighth streets and that upon one of the two locations he will erect a block the comirg summer. \yer's union of the city of Lincoln have “their arrangements com- plete for a grand ball on the evening of the 21s! Temple hall, Chief of Police Beach yesterday pur- chased the Hurlburt residence adjoining his own on L street between Tenth and Lieventh for $4,000 cash. AT THE HOTELS Among the Nebraskans entertained at Lincoln Totels ye ay were the folloy mg: H. R. Howe, E. Tucker Howe, W H. Stine, Geo. P. Reynolds, Ulysses; W W. Drummond, M Hartig: Platt mouth; J. M X Weeping Wate Warren, aska Uity M. Barker, Silver Cree! as, Brownville; E. L. ; E. K.Valentine, W Hebron; A, E. Sloan, J. Mount, J. W. Paddock, . am, C. W.Strock, M. O. Maul, Gibson, R. W. Breckenridge, H. e, Omab el i A Sudden Death from heart disease is now quite common Dr. Pierce’s “Golden Medical Discovery" is a certain remedy. Chronic irritation, palpatation, excessive or defective action of the heart, sbortness of breath, and Y:\in. are removed by it in a short period. talso cures all the "diseases relating to the skin of Columbus, ) iver, stomach, bowels, blood and — —— WESTERN CIVALITIES. A Stranger Who Insisted on Having His Cur Kunsas City i AS Caslhin, who lives at No. 404 East Fourth street, was_ walking down Eighth street, just opposite the immense shed under which the new hotel is going up, he was stopped by a stranger who said; “Please excuse me, sir.for interrupt- ing your walk, but 1 would like to know why you have your left eye bandaged up. Did you receive your injuries in a fight or as it purely accidental?” This ludicrous inquiry attracted the at- tention of severaul persons who were passing by, and Caslin for a moment was surprised that he could not reply. 1 am waiting paticntly for your g swer,” began the garrulous and intrusi drawing a watch from his nd holding it open in his right hand, while he appeared to be ealmly counting the passing seconds. ‘I assure you, sir, [ am anxious to have a word from you regarding this matter.” “Who are you?” asked Caslin, fins recoyering from his surprise. “There 15 my card, sit,’ said the man, with mock politeness, tendering him a mes: Ct ly n then beeame convineed that the i nd_ passing on, he said: ©I don’t see that itis your aflair, nor why you should know how I got my ve and arm burt,” “You ain't going off without telling me anything at all about it, are you?” asked the stranger, and drawing " revolver he commanded Caslin fo halt. Caslin re- fused and he fired. The bullet whistled by Caslin but that did not appear to frighten him i the least. for he turned and ran towards the man, whose name afterwards proved to be Mahan, Mahan was so surprised that he forgot to shoot again, and took off down the street with n following him and a curious erowd r heels. When the corner of Sixth Inut was reached Caslin caught his man and took the pistol away. He then gave him a severe thumping and, hold- ing him by the collar, lulA( a bystander to clephone” for the police patrol wagon This soon arrived ‘on the scene and Mahan was locked up in cell No. 1. M y showed that ne W yery bad intoxicated. The dancing party to be given by Mr, and Mrs. 8. 1. Smith in honor of Kansas City guests will occur to-night at the Mil- lard. OUR STAGE-STRUCK CIRLS. A Very Dark-Tinted Pioture of the Footlights. o Behind GARISH LIGHTS THAT GLIMMER The Thorny Path Which So Seldom Leads to Glory and 8o Often to the Grave—The Professions als' Prejudice. Mrs. John Sherwood in the New York World: Every year brings up its of ambitious 4oung American ladies, tenderly nurtured beings, who desire: to 20 on the st " The, Iy come ofl again in a year or two, and conclude plain sewing or school teaching would be paradise as compared to the life of a “lady actress,” 1f she goes off with a distinguished ac tress like Modjeska she 1s not allowed to stop at the same hotel with her; that not etiquet. She may be allowed to vlay some very inferior part, and be hissed tor her ns for doing it badiy. She is put under the care of the old woman who s the part of *“The Dowager’’ so ele and finds that her guardian is a vulgar old person who drinks too much But we will suppose her to be u philo sophic and patient girl, capable of living down all these disagreements of the first year; but she has learned, alas! that the ¢ looks better Lefore the footlights than it does behind them—that she has stepved on the wrong side of the illusion, It is not alone that tinsel reigns instead of gold or that looking glasses are made of muslin. It is not the rouge, or the pearl powder, or the ugly company of ropes and pulleys, dust and dirt evervwhere; it is not alone that she must rub her hands with chalk at movement else they look black. She learas that she has stepped into another world, whence all the *“fun ™ of private theatricals has vanished. She ns that has stepped into anothe world, where all that she learned in he own world goes for nothing. Her re ment and edueation, h v-like air pose, which she thought would fit her for the port I of lady-like characters these are all worse than has been obliged to raise diseard her manner, for the pronounced both inétlectual. she has conqueved her awky walk and has learned that the stage runs downlhill, She has reasoned that the primer of any language is full of diflicul- ties. She say f that she will suceeed, *“thatiti discour- aged, that only cow ;. But the fact remains t som her associates are good people many of them are ne have the power to make her It is to be feared that the of the theatri rtedness. up -~ gener: ey trainc However ard st her, Life hid great vi Euml~kmll- ags when a neo- phite com: m. They are not kind to the lady who steps on the stage. No people are so generous to each othier, none keep their hearts so alive to mel! i 1y, none show more firmness in 3 corrageous in a moment of n actors. Im- agine Mrs. C| th a fire behind her, keeping a whole theatre quiet while she courageou kept on with her part of the blind girlin the “Two Or- phan: There w a heroine! They live on the verge of the heroie, and their business makes them disdain the com- monpl unkind to tne newcomer it is almos lack of generosity. Imagine n upon them. To march y round of one piece per No wonder they want all their applaus poor people! It is 4 ward for all that they do. If not v what the rigid mol could desire, whose are? Can gentlemen or ladies cast th stone? N one always point with pride to the effect of the lighest society upon virtue? Can 1t not be possible that there are hypocrits in the best society who wear fine clothes, who are also not kind to the pretry y women who attract too much attention? Mrs. Kemble, in speaking of the profes- sion, dwelt with great bitterness on the bad effect on the moral ch r of the constant portrayal of emotions which one does not l,u But the actor or actress need not 1n this respeet have more to con- tend against than the clergyman, who must weep with those who weep and re- joice with those who rejoice balf a dozen times in the same afternoon. How much less contest, for truth, tha a fashion- able women, who must and whether she is bored to dezth or p! Actors or actre re notnece: sincere and they are very apt to keep one faith—that with the public—unbroken. But a girl, a lady, one who has had, if you please, the “‘enfeebling education of Tuxury’'—she is wounded by her new professional associates in a thousand ways, which would not happen to one to the manner born. The people who are born to the sock and buskin enjoy a amaraderi into which no other less fortunate person enters. Those persons who, as a rule, make the best actors and actre who are born in the profe he child brought up behind the footlights 1s sure to know the minor duties of the stage better than the in- pired genius who shull study them for years, Itis the old story of wasastonished that the “little ch in France spoke French so well.”’ The Iady actress learns, too, that innocence is no protection against slander, The re- proach which existed 10 the narrow re- ligious mind and the narrow society mind against the word ‘“actress’” h been nobly lived down, but the young girl who essays the sta should be told that a prejudice still exists, That this is out ously eruel no one can doubt— so are some of the laws which concern marriage, property, and perso. rights —but the windmill with which Don Quixote fought struck him with no less cruel blow that the face behind it was but the caprice of the passing breeze. Wo must all bow to the inevitable, profession of an actre: nta woman; it never injured Sarah dons, or Fanny Kemble, or Charlotte Cushman, or Adelaide Ristori,or Mod jeska, but it has injured, perhups ruined, thousands of nl{u-r:. Itis the edge of a precipice, washed by the sweetest and most allur- ing roses, and strong must be the he and firm the foot which treads it in S0 long #s & wo nains in e life, no matter if undered, yone feels sorry for her and defends o the last; but the moment she steps before the footlights she invites attack A popular sctress is the theme of a thousand gossipy tongues, and any story, no matter how improbable, will be be Hoved and unkind voices' will mingie vith even the voice of a just eriticism, The love of art and ie instinet may triumph, and the lady actresses may go on and work and support father mother, sister, brother, as many of ) are doing, the generous ecreatures—but ut what a cost to themselves! When the uncomfortable aund fre- guently unsuitable stage conveniences or the actress are considered; the omni present and stitling dust and motley erowd of “'supers’ hustling to and fro; 1he glare of the stage lights which all on the stage must face, are considered, how the picture changes! Then the meeting with an unsympathetic audience instead of that well-pleased ecircle of friends who have “sent flowers and will expect you to supper after the play with a basket of compliments forithe amateur, e she ever so medigere.” The poor vay Idsmith, who dren dirt; the | B, 1P, for even those on the hi ladder re rie pan once good for stars, the traveling clouds which follow All this should be thought of by a delicate girl before sho'steps upon the stage. All honor to those who ha all this. All honor to the brave g who have gone through mud, and mir and fatigue, and sorrow, and temptation, and come ont good 'actresses, good women. Th huve a staying power which we all They are the jewels of the they “muke able. is honorable in itself profession that s an_hof ort to earn onc's bread is honorable if they who serve at its altar, serve with pure hands. known many actres n them in their humble | E ir si beds; I have the story of their patient toil, plain, neat, self-sace ticing Jiv e felt like the mock-queen mantle d pre tomy lips in honor of ti And from one death-bed thanking the aetress for the lesson s had taught me of a soul so strong that it could defy temptation, and of a heart good that it could L left her attic I fe near heay But for all this, after profession on all sides, it is a hard for women, almost impossible for those not born to it. It is one which no woman should choose lightly. She shonld her own nts, for no woman can her: auty or a gift of elocution or dra- J tion will bring her success hest rung of the eive'cotivaratively small sala- then traveling com- young actress may very but on he heara S0 at 1 had been very looking at the if b ma on the stage. and yet fail, ] s0 curious. It i< like secing one’s face coneave or convex m r —it may be drawn out long or dc up very short No one knows until she tries. Then the physique admirable for reading may be 1 on the st knew itiful woman, full of the best stage ancestry, the inheritor of theatrieal blood, who was failure on the s whiie Adelaide Neilson, fresh from a g shop, with no ancestry, v httle ¢ tion, and a bad Lk pronunciation, was an eminent suc It 15 with no contempt for the Hw sion of an actress that these w i rom the spect, m knowledge of much sympathy for those gifted women who contribute so much to i ment. And it isalso from with enthu have desired to be actresses, and from an acquaintance with one lady who in almost middle life beeame so infatuated witi) the profession that she went pro fessionaliv on the stu Beautifully dressed, mistress of b an admira- onally. it broke neart. And, sorrowful to say, the enmy of the men and women on the s whom she hoped to become sional worker helped to kill her here are two forms of chronic rheun- ism; one in which the joints are swollen and red without fever: in the other the joints are only stitf’ and n- ful. In either form Salvation Oiln be relied on to effect a cure. It kills pain. 25 cents, ) Popu diserimination in favor of Dr. Bull’s Cough Syrup has given it a larger sale than uny other remedy ot its cla Price 25 cents, e Why Not? SravLping, Net eb. 14.—To the Editor of the B Since the voters of this cooamonwealth bave been so basely betrayed by therr so-called servants in the late senatorial contest, and since the corporate monsters who now ralé have accomplished this, as they have many other similar resuits, by a hberal outlay of “boodle” (wrung from the farmers) among the little “threc-up” Jawyers and political shysters, whom we, “the dear people,” have thus far been wheedled into sending to the legislature, and furthermore, since it is claimed that about ten out of every seventeen vote Nebraska are farmers or laborers, whose interests are closely allied to the rm, then and in that e why, in the me of the great I Am," should not we, “the dear peopie,” without re old party afiiliations, organiz boldly avowed purpose and mination to retire each and every one of the said “thre wyers, etc., to the oblivion of private life, whenco they came, and return in their places honest men of our own calling—men whom we know are ecapable and reliable, whom **bood will not corrupt nor the rail- road p: ad astray? If not, why not Or, 1n the absence of such action, how would it do to give the corporations a quit-claim deed to the state, and—move HOMESTEADER, D ery day adds to the great amount of X to the curative powers of Letters ¢ being reecived from all s country telling of benefits « from his great medic for gene debili fier, expelling ey other tmpunity it. Propar A g SHENANDOAH NUISIRIES. AND RET Dealers dress D.'S. Lake, Prop., Shenandoah, Towa. LINGOLNBUSINESS DIREGTORY Recently Built, Newly Furnisied The Tremont, J. C.FITLU ALD & SON, Pro ietors, Cor. #th and ¥ 5ts, Lincoin, Ne Rates $1.50 per day. Syrees cars from houso o an part of the ell) A W y J. H, W. HAWKINS, Architect, OfMces—83, 54 and 42, Richards Block, Lincoln, Neb. Elevator onl1ta street. Broedar of SmoRT HOKN CATTLE .M WOODs, Live Stock Auctioneer Sules made in all parts of the U 5. at fair rates. Hoom 3, State Block, Lincoln, Neby Galloway and Short Horn bulls for sule. B. 1. GOULDING, Farm Loans and Insurance, Corresnondence in regurd to loans solicited, Roow 4, bards Biock, Lincoln, Neb, Breeder o1 GALLOWAY CATTL Riverside Short Horns Of strictly p By an | Bates Tapped cattle. Herd nuy Famil ficum‘» 8 A night Juchosses, Fb, hw-{. qu-u:‘ p 285, rons, Moss Roses, st Creek Young Marys, Trug Love: 1 Pure Bates 1 Rose of Sharon Shank and ot o hepd. ~Address, C! ert, 1 Pure ounz Mary, Come aid M OBRAN When 1n Lincolu stop at National Hotel, And get 8 40od dlaper fu e, FEDAWAY Prop ve conquercd t honor- | If, and when | one one | FEBRUARY 17, 1887, TR IED CRUCIBLE. About twenty yoars ago I discovered o lttle sore on my cheek, and the doctors pronounced it cancer. Thave tried & number of physiclan: but without recelving any permanent benefit. Among the number were one of two spectalists. The medicine they applied was like fire to the #oro, causing fntense patn. 1saw a statemont 1n the papers telling what 8. 8. 8, had done for others similarly aficted. 1 procured gomoat Detore T had usad tha second bottla the nelghbors eould onee. 100 that my cancer was healing up. My gencral health had been bad for two or threo years—I had a hacking cough and &pit blood contl 1 had & severe nmy breast. After taking six bottles of S, my cough left me and Igrew stouter than I had been for several yoars. M. has healed over 1l but alittle spot about the slze ot ah me, and it is rapldly 10g. 1 would advise every one:with can glve 8. 8. . atatr trial, M Fob, Swift's § scems t rttes fro Skin Diseases malled froo, 1 THE SWIFT SPECIFIC c0., NTA, GA. cific 13 entlrely vegetable, and ro caneers by foreing the biood, out the tmpu- Treatise on Blood and DRAWER 3, ATL Vior_a treatiso au ! A and STONE MALT WHISKEY Specinlly Distilled for Medicinal Use. THE BEST TOHIC UNEQUALED for CONSUMPTION WASTING DISEASES and GENERAL DEBILITY, | PERFECTS DIQESTION DR. EDW. L. WALLING, Sur geon in Chief, National Guarc of N.J., writ My atte your Ko B ¥ Lald TEY and T ha with far b have had your ar e DR 0N Tac-sialle of B o the Label. EISHER & MENDELSON, Sole Ax ev.s 818, 318 and 320 R ladelnhia, Pa. Goodman Drog Co.,Genl. Agents,Oma Nebraska, A Pereheron and s0 Homo Bred volts very ammal guaranteed a breeder Prices rensonnble and terms easy. Our stock has becn sclected with reforencs 1o both individual merit und pe A lurgo number of our ailions vro acclimated and Colts of their wet n be shown. York is on tho B. X M. R. ®., two hours' ride west of Lincoln. For cata- lozues and further information, adirss CH, Yorx,Neb. ale Stullions. % of hood, Debil C.y b A T O OMpPres s, o Giloce fitting icalar Free. AL SORERT Aasiier 7 Ptk 3. ow Tk, DRS. §. &D. DAVIESON, 1742 LAWRE STREET, DEAVER, - COLORADO, Of the Missouri State Museum of my, Louis, Mo.; Hospital London New York, Hav tion nato University College Giesen, Germany and g devoted their atten- SPECIALLY THE TREATMENT OF Nervons, Chronic and Blood DISEASES. More especially those arising from impru dence, invite all so suffering to correspond without delay. Diseases of infection and contagion cured safely and speedily without detention from business, and without the use of dangerous drugs. Patients whose cases have been neglected, badly treated or pronounced icurable, should not fail to write us concerning their symptoms, All letters receive immediate attention, ¥ JUST PUBLISHED _#&° And will be mailed FREE to any address on receipt of one 2 cent stamp, “Practical Observations on Nervous Debility and Phy- sical Exhaustion,” to which is added au ssay on Marriage,” with important chap- ters ON DISEASES OF THE REPRODUCTIVE ORGANS, the whole forming a valuable med- ical treatise which should be read by all young men. Address— DR & D, DAVIESON, 1742 Lawre st., Denver, Col, WOODBRIDGE BRO'S,, State Agents FOR THE DECKER BROY. PTANDS Omaha, Neb. FOR SALE Having sold most of my stock farm aud having no further them at a bargain, Strivs—Sta 542, Standard, com- ing six years old; bay, 16 hands, sired by field 229, he by Rysdyk's Hambletonian Also two spans of heavy draft muler, 8 years old, weight 2,200 and 0 pounds per span, 16 hands. They can be TO use for the following stock, I will se seen .a Spring Valley Stock Farm, one mile from city limits, northwest, Omaha. N. 1 D. SCLCNON SOUTH OMAHA Beautiful Residence Lots FOR SATE Also Business Lots LOOK. On the large map of Omaha and observe that the two and one-half mile belt from the Omaha postoffice runs south of section 33 and through the no.th end of South Omaha. TAKE A STRING And peneil, then get one of JAL Wolfe & Co's maps of Omaha nud‘Soulh Omaha combined, PrPUT YOUR FINGER On the string at 13th and Farnam, Omaha's_busines ceuter, and your pencil on the string ut where Bellevue strect enters South Omala from the north. THEN DRAW A circle and note where SOUTH OMAIA , and also that many “Additions,” “Places” and “Hills" are far OUTSIDE This magic circle. i srop And think aminute what will make outside property increase in value? THE GROWTH OF OMAHA Is all that will enhance the value of real estate other than at South Omal and make valuable the property: At the latter point we have three important factors to build up First—The growth of Omaha, which has and always will follow the transportation lines, ccond—All the great railroads center there, thus making it the best manufacturing point of any in ornear the city, ; Third— THE IMMENSE STOCK YARDS INTERESTS Dressed Beef Business and Pork Packing Industry Will make a town of themselves. SEVERAL NEW PACKING HOUSES Going up this year. A Gigantic Beef Canning Establishment To be put into operation at once, Y OU FOOL Away your day of grace when youdo not get an interest in South Omaha before a higher appraisement is made, The best locations are being taken Make your selections now: Lots that sold for $300 in 1854 cannot now be hought for £3,000, THX VIADUCTS Over the railway track will inuke safe and splendid thoroughfares befween chis city and South Omaha. A STREET CAR LINE Will run to the Stock Yards this year. The minute it does lots will dou. ble in value, as this will afford quick and cheap transportation either by Dummy, Cable or Horse Cars. For further information, maps, pric addres sts, und descriptive ecirculars, C. E. MAYNE, Agent for the South Omaha Land Company, N. W. Cor. 16th and Harney.

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