Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 18, 1887, Page 5

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEEK: MONDAY, APRIL 18, 1887. IT WAS QUEER EDUCATION. How the Nebraska University Professors Teach the Students Politics, SERIOUS CHARGES PREFERRED. The Missourl Pacific Pushing Its Btate Hxtensions—The OCapitol Gronuds Improvement— State House Notes. |FROM THE BEF'S LINCOLN BUREAT, | The state organ of the prohibitionists, publislied in this city, the New Republic, in its Inst issue comes out with serious and what seems to be substantial charges against the state university, for its med- dlesome methods in politics and attempts to herd the students and vote them ns a fow of the professors dictate. The state university has been in politics so notori- ously in the matter of securing appropri- ations, and the chancellor has exhibited himself as a lobbyist on 80 many ocen- sions, that in the matter of tighting for the old flag incidentally and for an appro- priation primarily, has been so well known 1n the state as to pass beyond cur- rent comment. The New Republie, how- ever, in its expose, goes into local details and shows up in » way worthy of more than passing atteation that the univer- sity is largely in city volitics, and that the head of the institution is willing, if not to openly assist, to close his eyes upon schemes to turn the university vots into channels to assist the president of the board of regents in punishing a parti- cular political enemy. The prohibition organ, under the heading, “Polities in iska Umiversity,” charges in e eve of the late city elec- 1 t two prominent mem- bers of the faculty of the state university, with the approval and co-operation of Chancellor Manatt, called a private meeting of the voting members of the university for considering matters - taining to the municipal contest. Fur- ther it recites that the attempt was made to pledge the students to stand by the action of the meeting, whatever it might be, and that while h’ere(omre many of them had worked for the prohibition ticket, that this time they were to be driv ike members of a gravel train to vote for the democratic nominee under the disguised head of a citizens’ ticket. The New Republic comes out and names Professor Barber and Tutor Caldwell as the two professors who manipulated the caucus, and made Sawyer speeches to the students, and thus itis illustrated that the state ur w-rsntv.ly‘ supported by citi- zens of ev shade of political opinion in the state, is made a Jever for designing political professors to manipulate, = An- other interesting investigation could be made to fina how many students re- coived reduced rates on the rail- roads through the tificate of the steward of the university thut they certain places in the state, and cing how many of these students homes were so remote from Lin- coln as to entitle them to reduced rnil- road rates at vacation, voted and worked for the d ratic ticket through the manipul influences of the resi- nt regent’s political strikers in the uni- ity faculty. 3 DING THE MISSOURT PACIFIC, 2 the present season the Missouri ¢ railroad will build westward from Lincoln after its share in Nebraska pro- ducts in the active rivalry that exists at the present time between the corpora- tions in tho conquest of territory. One of the bills of the lust session that was closely watched and lobbied by Missouri Pacitic people was the bill granting cor- orations the right of way over state ands and prescribing the manner in which title to the sanme may be acquired. One of the prominent Missouri Pacific men of the state volunteered the inform- ation that if this bill was passed the Mis- souri Pacific would immediately cross the state lands that lie in a body “to the west of Lincoln and proceed on a new lino from the capital city. In the last two weeks a corps of surveyors have been at work west of the city on this oo templated line, and a business aspect has already been given the movement, ‘The St. Louis papers announce the departure of Jay Gould over the lincs of the road in the Missouri Pacific corpora- tion, and the railway king will be in Lincoln the present week. 'Lhis is a trip of inspection, and it is understood that immediately following it the construc- tion plans of the company will be formu- lated. AT THE STATE HOUSE. One of the coming improvements ut «the stato house that will be appreciated by the Lincoln populace will be le improve- ments of the grounds of the capitol build- ing These grounds are large in area, high and dry, and can be made as beauti- ful as any in the land. At the last ses- sion of the legislature it was provided that the money realized from the sale of state lots should be used in the improve- ment and banut\lyinfi of these grounds snd in defraying the extra expense in- curred in the change lans in finishing the uilding, It is thought the state lots to be sold will atleast real- ize $100,000, and of this sum one-fourth will suffice to meet the extra expense on the building, leaving the handsome sum of $75,000 to use in beautifying and im- proving the grounds. In just what way the grounds will be rejuvenated will rest with the board of lands and buildings, and while it will Erohlbly not be more than commenced the nt year, never- theless the work will be done within two years. ‘Then the desirable consumma- tion will be reached of having the barren tract studded with cottonwoods, a thing of beauty and a joy for many years. Work 18 now actively resumed on the central part of the capitol building, and wlll be continued by the contractor through the entire season. The buildin: will require at least eightcen months’ time before its final completion, but the change from standing oven to the weather to progress is one that every one will relish, George M. McConaughy, of Stroms- burg, tiles n complaint with the raeilroad commissioners asking that the time of running the passenger train through that town be changed so that citizens can get their mail betore it is twenty-four hours old, and also asking that the depot build- ing and platform be repaired and im proved. NEW NOTARIES. The following (u‘w notaries publie will bé commissioned to-day: J. C. Wheeler, Noupareil, Box Butte county; E. Fearon, maha, G. C. Sherman, Grottenburg, Dawson county; H. M. Vanderbilt, Fair- tield, Clay county; E. T. Hodson, Schuy- ler; Jacob Robinson, Omaha; E. L. Pen- tield, Burnell, Garlield county; Charles E. Pierce, Pawnee City; C. W. Brum- minger, Grand Island;:E. W. Beghtol, Daniel Binkerd, Dom*‘ Holt F. W. Kiplinger, Loomis, Phelps B. Reed, Grant, Keith county; 8. A, Hail, Nebraska City; W. D. King, Minden, Knnrnuy oount; . M. Fillmore, Fullerton, Nance county; W. A. Sillicks, Lancoln; E. D. Uphaw, Lincoln; W. G. Jones, Fullerton; George D. Meiklejohn, Fullerton. EXTENDING THE LINE. 1t is understood that the present week will witness construction work com- meneed upon the extension of the Four- teenth street railway line that will be extended the present season to the state penitentinry. This will m & great «doal of a boom to the handsome suburban property on the south of Lincoln, and it is understood incidentally that a syndi- eate of nroperty owners intend making of Thirteonth street a paved boulevard south of the city limits, and the most popular street in the city. W. H. B. Stout, who owns several hundred acres adjoining the city in this direction, is one of the promo- ters in the enterprise, ABOUT THE CITY, The county commissioners have been considering the feasibility of securing more and better nccommodations for the county offices and that they are sadly needed none will gainsay. The present roorms occupied by the county offices are dingy and crowded and the need of more roomy quarters is daily more apparent, The commissioners have been consider- ing the lease of the new Bohannon block on Tenth street; the location is nearly as good as the present and for comfort and convenience there is no comparison in the two places. Messrs. N. C. Abbott, John B. Wright and Sam D, Cox have recently purchased a forty acre tract adj; ng the town of North Platte and they have platted 1t into city lots. The firm are now sceking a name for their new addition, A publie meoting is called for to-night at the ac y of music rooms in the Capital ional bank building, The object of this meeting is to consider a plan for advertising the city through the has been formulated by Messrs, J. D, Calhoun and Sam D. Cox. The plan contemplates the publication of a half million pamphlets ad ising the city and making a_judicious distribution of them through all the eastern states. The cityis now under the guardianship of the new police force and under the in- structions of the mayor none of them are to touch that which intoxicates. Thus far no one kas the heart to coldly givo them away when their will is not strong cnough to refuse a friend. The sale of the Capital hotel leaves the veteran hotel man, C. W. Kitchen, open for some w y to secure. Mr, Kitchen has, it is understood, had flatter- ing inducements from one of the hest cities in Colorado to engage in business there, but at present no plans for the fut- ure have been perfected, T'he belt lino surveyors are pushing preliminary work and haye already run a line from West Lincoln to the asylum and penitentiary, and are pushing east- ward from the latter point. To say that there is a furore for ten-acre tracts along the line is stating it mildly, and before the year ends there will be enough land platted for a city of half a million, The board of the now Wesleyan Meth- odist university has advertised for bids for the construction of the buildings, and the plans complete are at the office of the ¢, The time for receiving bids is limited to the 12th of May. The Lincoln base ball cliib has bt.:l-n in take the field at the ope A number of very su 9 have recently been signed who have watched the practice games are confident that the lincoln club could have gone to Des Moines and returned home with laurels, Business in police court has been run- ning light recently, the most serious case considcred being the sending Saturday of a burly negro to the county jall to serve out a sentence including a fine of §50 and costs. e Pozzon's Comp n Powder proi duces a soft and beautiful skin. It com- bines every element of beauty and purity. Sold by druggiets —~— Grant, Beecher and Eads, Evening Wisconsin: Within the past awo years the nation has lost three of its most illustrions men—its greatest soldier, its greatest engineer and its greatest preacher. Two of these men were born and reared in the west. One was born at the cast, but he spent his yonth and y hood in the west, where he r religious training. All were broad men, commensurate with the vastness of tho country with which they were born, and, we miy say, all were products of the great war, for Beecher's sermons at home, and his di courses in England during the ws favor of the rigfl’icuuev action of the nortl were as magnificeny exhortations to patriotism and the inestimable vaive of doing right, as were ever uttered by mortal man. Beecher, in his field of influencing public sentiment for the right, and in persuading young men to volunteer for their country, was scarcely less powerful than Grant” on the field of battle. His thanksgiving sermon during that dread- ful period were models of intellectual ower, of eloquence, and of patriotism, n truth, Beecher was one of the greatest of home captains in carrying on the war qfix‘\msl slavery. Buds, with his fleet of quick-constructed gunbouts, was as potent a8 a great gen- eral in clearing the upper Mississippi of rebel obstructions to the triumphant passage of the Union armies to Vicks- urg and New Orleans. The nation may justly mourn the loss of these three men, tor thewr ike will never be seen again. And yot, fortunately, none of them were cut off until they had fulfilled their nussion_and until their remarkable ge- nias had been made so manifest that all the world acknowledged their enemies. nide At AL Cuts, Wounds, Surlln£ and Bruises gicklv heal if you nfl)l‘y r.J. H. Mc- an's Volcanic Oil Linim ‘Where Quac| lourish. St. James Gazette: ‘I'he Persians have one never-failing subject of conversation; that subjrct is their health. The plens- ure of talking about the weather is de- nied to them; for as oleven months out of the twelve are fine in Persia, the subject does not present sufticient variety, But a Persian, to whatever class of society he may belong, i8 never tired of talking about his ailments, real or supposed, In Ius eves all Feringhis (Europeans) are doctors, and the Kuropean doctor is the very best of all. For many years at Shiraz there lived an old Swede who had walked into Persia in his youth. He knew nothing of medicine on his arrival, but, find- g that the natives constantly solicited his advice, he bought u few medical books and literally acquired a certain amount of knowledge h{ carrying out the good old principle of “Fiat —experi- mentum in corpore vili.” Happily the Hakim Sahib also belicved in the ‘‘vis medicatrix nature.”” As a rule his drugs were harmless. “I have different col- ored liquids,” said he, “‘and as lnnF as there is bread and water to be had 1 am never at a loss for a pill.” The pills were floured for the common people and gilded for the rich. At seventy years of e Hakim Sahib died. He held the Yo- :&ion of physician to the forces of the rovince, and was deservedly. respected y natives and Europcans, POZZONI'S MEDICATED COMPLXIONPOW sived his n h DER For infant's toilet is an indispensablo ar- ticle, healing all excoriations immediate y. Mothers should use it freely on the ttle ones. It is perfectly harmless. For sle by druggists. — Earthquakes. Since the year 1400 there have been 380 serious earthquakes in Italy. The most disastrous oun record occurred in the oars 1169 at the foot of Mount Etna, with 5,000 vietims: 1436, in the Neapolitan E‘nvhwu, 30,000; 1627, in the province of uglia, 4,000 victims; 1638, in Calabria, 0,600 victims; 1693, in Sicily, 98,000 vie- tims; 1703, in Central Italy, 15,000 vic- tims; 1783, in Calabria, 60,000 victims; 1857, 1n Basilicata, 13,300 victims; in 1 in Ischia, 3,515. e —— Dr. M. L. Ksufmaon, Chronic disor- ders of a delicate nature confidentially treated. Geuts, room 10; ladics, 12, Oad Fellow's Block. [EPITAPHS AND EULOGIES. Scraping the Moss From Some Very As- cient Graveyard Stones. MANY MILDEWY MEMORIALS. Husbands' Tributes to Wives De- parted-Old Maide Remembered —Paupers and Bummers in Rhyme—Joy and Sorrow. Time was when epitaphs were clabo- rate sermons, when eulogies to “God's best gift"” were of many wor but our modern epitaphs have so diminished i verbal volume that the fame of Cuw brevity is in imminent danger. It is not to be inferrcd at all that rough man loves gentle woman less, but rather that he has learned to crystallize his senti ments to tit the contracted space of mod- ern tombstones, Just how soul-trying, how diflicult this condensation, this boiling down as 1t were, of the joyous reminiscences in the life of a hen-pecked Petruchio of his mild-mannered Katherine's gentle cur tain wlks, 80 smoothly eloquent because of the omission of all commas, must ever more remain a matter of vague conjee ture; but certdin it is that a cursory an- dily extracts the heart wails rar-yielding griet of a stricken one tike hie wio wrote: Here lies my poor wife, a slattern and shrew LE I said [ regretted hor—1 should lie too. The poet who wrote of woman that The harmony of their tonzues hath into Bondage brought my too diligent ear. was truthful, but it ined for one Jonn Young, in hi sh, to givea prosuic completion to the poet's express: ion, which he did when he indited the following epitaph: Under this stone, a lump of clay, Lies Arabelln Young Who on the 24th of May Began to hold her tongue. Again, sce the calm resignation of a be- reaved husband of Cheshire, who, after the date of her death, had placed on his wife his'touching cpitaph: re was a ereat calu. Next in the lugubrious procession comes a stricken Welsnman, and in the following epitaph to his “‘better half’’ tells of the sweetest spot on earth, and Jmagine, if you can, the genuine grief of a modern philosophier who epitomized his irreperable loss in this couplet 1lere lies my Xantippe, let her lie: She finds repose at last and so do 1, It is a libel on woman to charge that 8he talks too much, but if she 1s censur able for this, then man should share the sc it is into his ready unchained eloquenee is poured, but despite the injustice of the n, some mw it has epi graphed an inoffensi ister in this wise A talkative old maid, Beneath this silent tomb is laid, A noisy antiquated maid, Wiio, from her cradlo tallved i death, And ne'er before was out of breath, And here 18 the pathetic story of the sad taking off of poor Martha Snell; Poor Martha Snell, her's gone awa ter would it she could, but by 8 ¢ coutdn’t stav: Tlerd two sore legs and a badish eouglh, But her les it wils that carried her ofl. Now follows the history of the de- parture of a father and thrae daught the epitaph being taken from the Chelt- enham churchyard. Here [ lies with my thres dauhters, All through drinking Cheltenham waters. 1f we had but stuck to Epsom salts Wae shouldn’t havo been in these here vaults, eesibly the use of these waters would been of more sorvice in Groton, ., Where may be seen the following: bigal Kendrick, widow of Captain Caleb Kendrick, left her pleasant home in Newton and came to her daughter Dana's, in Groton, on abeount of ye civil war, and saJne ber 5, 1775, aced 76, was removed by a dysentery to that place’ where ko from troubling and ye we urie cens rest. Possibly Dame Abagail was more anx- ious to leave this sphere of suffering than was she of whom the following epituph speaks in the churchyard at Kent, Eng- land: Grim death took me withoutany warning: L was well at nightand died at 10 in the morn- ing. Witness the calm resignation of one who lies at Painswich, Gloucestershire, England: My time has come! my days are spent; 1 was called away—and away I went. A tombstone in the Isle of Wight has inseribod upon it the touching story of the apotheosis of Margaret Gwyn througl an unusual hatchway: Here lies the bones of Margaret Gwyn, She was 50 very pure within, She cracked hér outer shell of sin And hatched herself & seraphim. The disconsolate widow of an English landlord thus advertised the countin ance of the tavern business on an epitaph of her lamented husband: Here lies the landlord of the Lion, He'’s buried here In the hopes of Zion; His wife, resigned to heaven’s will, Carries on the business still. ‘The evil that meu do live after them, but but the good is interred with their bones. But the following apitaph tells of one who took nothing good with his bones: Here lies John Hill, a man of skill, His age was five times ten ; He never did good, nor e Had he lived so lohg again. And but tor this preserved epitaph would have passed away ‘‘unhonored and unsung,” gone unra[f! tted to his kin- dred aust, Jike poor Matthew Mudd as told in the following epitaph Here lies slatthew Muad, Death did him no hurt; When alive he was mud, Now he's nothing but dirt. Epitaphs are sometimes the_vehicles of rejoicing, as given in the following on a grave yard sexton Hurrali ! my brave boys, let's rejoice In his For if he had lived, he had buried us all. The same vein of exultation runs through the epitaph of the sexton's silent partner, one Dr, Chard: Here lies the remains of Dr. Chard, Who filled this half of the graveyard. How glad the people of Dundee must have been to read the following epitapi on their arbitrary provost: Lrovost Peter Paterson was provost Dundee, Provost Peter Paterson, here lios he. Hallalujah! Hallalujah ! Stophen, a fiddler, now gone to the place to which all good fiddlers are smd to go, and which is reported full of them, kept for years, the country dance a-going, and kept good time with his feet; but, alas! could not evade his own time when it came, for his epitaph reads: Stephen and Time Are now but even; Btephen beat time, Now Time beats Stephen. The (o}lnwinz epitaph carries with it respeet for the widow's anguish, and ho who reads it in the cemotery whispers low lest it wake him from his sleep: Sacred to the mem of my husband. Passers, pray for his soul’s repose; but pray not loud. He is not dead, but sleepeth. No matter what the clefraa f kinship, or what the character of life's pursui no class can escape the epitaph, the brother, the bummer, the photographer, [ ~T W the pauper, or the woodman, to each of them is given & parting shot on the tomb, as follows ‘U'he brother Erectad to the memory ot John Phillips accidently shiot, asa mark of nffection, by his brother, The bummer ¢ Mere lie the remains of Caleb Humm, By trade a bum Wi 3 ed , comp.” The photographer:; Here 1 lie, taken from life. pauper {ere lie T at the ehancel door; tere | lie because I'm poor. ‘The turther in the more to pay} Here lie [ as warm as they. ‘L he woodman The lord saw good, 1 was lopping wood, And down fell from a tiee: 1 met with a check and broke my neck, And so death lopped off me. The Filed April 16, 1887, nor to Sophia 11 18 by 530 ft heginuing at Burt and Pleasant St w. is . $ 1,000 00 to Mary L Garison, foyers Richards & Rt Rev J Barton : &) n e cor of Tildens add 700 00 Idalyn G Yt and husband o Win Davis of south vart of 0 i Park Place add wd Johin T Hopkins to i Williams w igexcept s 9 ft of lot? bl ¢ < 2nd add w d raham to Ess e Wall on add, wd Mayuard and husband to Joe Bookwalter lot & Yates & ds sub div of lot 7 Ragans add UeniTavL Wsegvo1950100) e eck and wite to Baward A Roies lot 11 Bontield, wd ¢ A Willis to the publie plat of Columbia Place, being lot 19 of dedication an and 1,200 00 0 00 1,500 00 900 00 to John K King, lot 5. bl arman's sub div of blk 4. Hyde Park, wd . Hawley @ to Mary ! Hanscom 400 00 4,500 00 4,5, 14, 15, 1yn's sub div le 1 Mfi. wod W Melchaer and wife to rott, lot 15, blk 4, and Jot ¢ Mayne's add, w d. 1,000 00 500 00 ) i ds and ‘I add, ceee 1,520 00 » W Loom 1172 Barver. lots 9, 10 and 24, Loomis’ sub div of lot 22, Tutt SUbdive W doivieiiiinsin . John Resnichek and wife to Jore- Keogh, lot 7 blk 5 Arbor e W 3 S Ronnds and wife unds, undiy 6, 7.8 9, blk 1,500 00 1,500 fots 17, 18 BIK? lots 5, 1, 11 in Potter & Cob's 7,100 2d add to South Ok, and Co to Jos S Damron, ik 84 amron to th mron's sub div of outh Omaha, wd Public Plat of lots 54 bik 34, | \ Bedrord Warren 1. Parks to August Doli and b acres in 21, 15, 1, wd Theo Olsen and wite to yas Tot 16 bik 2 South Ol L Ry P TR Jas Vore and wife to ‘il Olsen, lot 14 bli 1 Hammona place add Omaba wd... 20,000 or Parld 5 0 600 00 Auncustns Kountze and wife to terson, n'Z lot 6 bik 1 Kountze's thadd W d.... ; tt 8 Wilson fo Arthie € cloy. lot 17 bl 5 Paddock Aty € ddoc 600 00 P d 5 2,800 00 ) Chiatiton ot &l to Wakely, lot 16 blk 5 ] place W d...... i 3,50 00 Mary Magaw nnd nd M Dodd, lot land 2 bik 1 Padd 0.000 00 rhwd..... 2,02 00 the public piat of West Hill add com 482 ft o and 35 ft 0 of sw cor of sely, 4-14- 18 n 1743 sw_ 65 dog 50 min to pt n line of County road w from bezinning E Barker and wife to Mareus lot 13 blk @ sub div of John I Redick’s, ndd w d Theo I Cramer to Wm J € P Cran er, lof 5 blk 16, Meyers Richards and [ 'Tildensadd, w d vee Nathan Shelton and wite Butlin, lot 13 blk 1 Windsor terre- 2,250 0 4,40 D Mercer and w ‘end, lots 13, 14, 16, bl Il s 1,500 Nestroyil, asso, add wd.. Henry Ambler, et 00X120 ' ft Kuhn and wite to Flma L, 3itot lotS blk 7, Om ihu A Br Biich, Ambiar A _E Touzilin and wife to Jesse Rogers, lot 1 1, Hillside add A K ‘Touzalin and wife to Curtis Goulding, lot 3, blk 1, Hillside ad- dition V. D . Arthur S Pott Jackson, lots A, block 7, Potter & Cobb's “nd aadition to S Omaha, W D . Dennis Carroll to Geo Parsell, lots 1 and E 15 feet of lot 10, bik 10, Shinn's addition, W D... . Gottleib I Treiser and wite erick ¥ Trelser, N 4 8 1L, WD Gottleib F helm Treise WD : ot Lew W Ihii to Join A Lawrence, 1t 4, blk 14, Omaha View, W D.. Boverly B Desms to John I, Carson, lors dand ¢, bik 17, liedtord place, to ( 100 1,200 00 v 1,400 00 Byron Keed et ai to 1 B0 ncres in 5-10-11, W D............ 1200 00 Lalthas Jetter and wife to Louiss Staddard, lot 14, bl 6, Jotte add South Omatia, w d., Jessie M Lewis and \vlll"(q Mortenson, lot 15, blk * strong's 18t add w d Edward Oesterreicher to Jfa Lovett et al, lots 18 ang 438, Grandview, w d...,... v City of Omaha to John chrlyw{x her- son, 15-1x66 £t bezinnine b sw cor of lot 4, blk 246, Omalin. qc. .. 8 E Wallace and husband: son T Graham, ots 1 8, Walnut Hith w do ..y, Frederick De and wife to son ‘T Graham, lots 1 and 2, bik Fred Dellone’s add, w ¢ Chas W Wallstrom' and wife {0 1enry L Chamberlain, lot. 15, blk 6, Kilby plaes, W vy greg rore Augusius Rountze andy'wite 'to Itovert F Morton, n 263¢'f] of 8:4d of lot 8, blk 9, Kountze's 4th add Moses S Jaffe an Balaine, n 45 feet of w b of lot 20, Redick's 2d add, wd.......... Robert P Iamilton to Robert P Bos- worth, w 6 et of lot 21, 22, blk 1,600 00 Jdacod Arm- way 7,800 00 200 00 175 35 o d 12, ,000 00 1,200 00 10 630 00 45,000 00 & French and wife to Harry M Sampson, los § blk 16, Central Park, wd...... City of Omaha 15, Nelson' , q¢.. . i and wife to Chas ¥ dman, lot 3 blk 451, lot 19 blk ot 5 blk 486, Grandview add, 4,500 00 00 00 s add 200 100 00 ’ ; 20 00 Quick, lut 5, blk 450, Grandview, hqa 1, Lovett 1( al to Martin Quick, undiv % of lot 20, blk 450, Gravd- view, g e. Lewis 'S Reed ‘and wite to Martin Quick, lots 0, $aud 14, ‘block 470, randview; w @, ... Mazrtin qulck and wife to Charles l‘-_ soodman, lots 6, 8 and 13, blk lot4 5, 6, 7, 14, 20 and 13 AN, d Frank irandview: wd. T Murphy te Geo £ Thop son, lot 55, Nelson's add: q ¢ " Charles ], Grobecker et al to August Weiss, lot 15, blk 8, add; wd... Filed April 15. Theo Olsen etal to Neils A Myqvist, lots 12 and 13 blk 1, Hammond Place add to South Omahia, wdio coviiie Hattie A Allen and husband to Luc E Blackman. lots 12 and 13 blk I Hanscom Place, wd..... Voo M T Patrick and wite to Geo F r'aul, south 80 feet of lots 7and S blk 8, Pa- trick’s Sacond add, wd........... i William 1, McCague to Charles B Ril‘("llle. lot 19 blk 3, Denise’s add, John W Geiffith trustee to Mrs Cora A Belden, lots 4, 5and 6blk ¥, Buker Place add, w d Edward V' Le! Scoten et al. | Eddy’s subdiv Shinn's Second add, w d Henry Malchin and wife to Giler, lot 7 blk 3, Al 2,70 % 100 700 00 v E Van an Cainp & Place, e W W fams, lof Meyers, Richards & Tilden's add, wd..lovvionoii, John P Simpkins and wite to Alice M Harmon, lots 1 and 2 bk 3, Golden, Daniel B Fuller to Wm Vaughn jr, un divided '¢ int in lot4 bik 1, J 1" Red- ick’s subdiv, w d Geo W Masson and wife to mer, Lacrs in 1415, wd. . L Phillip Brady to A, J Qvistgard, lot 10 bk 2, Patrick’s add, wd. . Michael Dillon et al to Mary K Burn: lot 11 blk 4, Thornburg place, w d... J M Katzmaier to Chas A Locke, lots 5 i ‘s add to Walnut 0 Mis. Elma feetof lot 1 blk 8, w d s and wife to Geo B feet of sub lot 2 of lot 8, Capitol add, wd...... Albert 8 Billlngs and wite to Frank Rosenberry, lot 10and 8 16 feet of lot ‘||, I.lu. B subdiv of John 1 Redick W f J Ka 5 lot 1 bIK 1, Hanseom ) Jas C Brennan and wite to Sinof man, w i feet of lot S blk 152, wd... Wi G Aibright and wife to Henry 1) Lhoades, lot 29, Windsor place, w d Alice G'Donahoe et al to Nannie C Brown, lot 0, Union Square, w d Otto Lobeek ot al to I ile Br W feet of lot 1 blk ) {¢ ginning at ne cor of lot 1hl Erastus H Benson and wife to Mrs Libbie Holland, lot 22 blk 4, Brizgs place, wd.. John A Horbach H tlammon, 75x140 teet commencing at ne cor Horbaeir's Reserve on w line of 16th hich is n or see line through 15-15-15, w d.... ases ared with atrict regard Lo Purity, Strongth, and. Hoalthfulncss, Dr. Price's Baking Powder coutains no Ammonia,Lidme,Alnm or Phosphates. Dr.Prico's xteacts, Vaiills, Lemon, etc., favos Geliciously. ‘Mudisen hawars, Poiada, Pe. 560 Acres of Land, Cornering with Soldier's Home, One-halt Mile West of Grand Island, One-half mile west of additions selling $250 per acre—will be sold for $30 per acre, Over 200 acres under cultivation The whole lying nice for building pur- poses; houses, barns and fences on the place as well as three fine groves, The street railway will run within one-half mill. Will sell as a whole or in part. The above will be sole to satis{y condi- tious of a trust fund. Addres: B. PERKINS, l):fiml !slnml. Neb. GOLD MEDAL, PARTS, 1878, ARER' anakfasl Coton Warranted absolutoly pure Cocoa, from which tho excess of Oil haa been removed. It bas three times the strength of Cocos mixed with Starch, Arowroot or Sugar, A and ts therefore far more ccovomi- W cal, costing lesn than one cent @ It is delicious, nourlshing, g'hening, easlly digested, and admirably adapted for invalids as woil as for peraous 1o bealth . BARER & €0, Dorelstr, Mas BONED WITH KABO. BRT m Tho ONLY COR YoM CORTT o B R R ERFECTLY SATISFACTORY Not CHICACO CORSET CO 12 FRANKLIN OTRE ?"l‘ 408 Mreadwsy. Now York. Swimming Jackete Spinges ‘Partection Box, Specalums, Syphons, Sphtoons, n Box Syringe, Nursery Sheetlng, Nav, 3 oil Pacl Part Pen. Pen hoiders. Pessaries, Hose, B. B. & P. Co.Pal Hose Couplings, Hair Crimpers, Halr Pins, Hose Pipes, Hose Reels, Hats, Horse Covers, J. HURD THOMPSON, Sec. % Treas Drill & Duck, Flastic Stockings, Erasers, Door Mats, Dress Shicld Drinking Cu Elastic Ran, Douches, Cloth, e Bags, Catheters, ‘Wholesale 2 Retail. WE CARRY IN STOCK RUBBERE “Fish Brand” Coats, Bulbs, Alr Plllows, vmng; Brewer's Hose, C1 Brus! ‘Aprons, Atomizers, ds, Band: Bay OMAHA RUBBER CO, O. H. CURTIS, Pres. - Lawrence (& FAMOOS “BELLE IsDeath to Malaria, Chillsand Fevers Typhoid Fevor, Indigestion, Dyspepsia, fBurgical Fevers Blood Poisouing Bty \y/ s (N * [{TS FRIES USFRUTING )1 The GREAT other deleterious substan Family use and Medicinal pmxaoul. J.P.B himbles, Hot Water Bottles, Haversacks, Face Bags, Finger Cots, Copy Book Sheets, Clothing, tismal Pants, age Gam, FUSE) DL BEEORT (T es and strictly pure Ventilating Soles, Trotting Rolls, Wagon Urinal Umbrelias, Wagon Cove: Cloth, | bers, Shoes & Boots, Sink Scrapers, no Covers, Scoops, Gas Tubing, Gloves, Gossamer Caj ot Comb Cleaners, Corks, Cork Screws, Curry Combs, Cuspador: Comb, Belting, Bellows Cloth, Bibs, Shoes, h Blankets, Boots & OF o 150 Wagon Spri Ostrom & Co. ants, ottles, Window Cleaaers, Weather Strl, Webbing, Water b Wriinger Rolls, Wadin, Sling shots. Spouge Bags, Shooting Ci Soling, 1008 Farnam St., OMAHA, NEB. Mall Ordezs Solicited aad will RBecelve Promst Atteatioa. Mirrors, Mittens, Nuraing Bibs. Nursing Botties, Nipples, Waterproots, Matting, Hair Curlers, g Co’s. Rubber and Cotton Belting, Packing and Hose. Sole agents in Omaha. % aget Iting, Pure Oak Tanned. Manufacturers of “PERFECTION BOX SYRINGES.” Galter Straps, Manufacturers of “FISH BRAND RUBBER GOODS.” Door Bands, OMAHA RUBBER COMPANY, and Packin el Breast Pumps, Breast Shields, Boston Beltin; Leather racelets, Buffer BOURBON.” Consumption, Sleepleasness, Or Insomnia, and, Dissimulation, 0t Food, Ten YearyOld, No Fusel 031, Absolutely Pure, A §1ilitD | IS APPETIZER This will certify that I have examined the Bel'e of Bourbon Whisky, received from Lawrence Ostrum & Co,, and found the same to be perfectly tree from Fusel Oil and Icheerfully recommend the same for RNUM, M. D,, Analytical Chemist, Louisville, Ky, For sale by dru in the United States on the receipt of Missouri River, LAWRENCE OSTROM & CoO. dollars, plain boxes will be gists, wine merchants and grocers everywhere. Price $1.35 per bottle Ifnot found at the above, half-doz. bottles i‘n Myt v o sent to vny address Express paid to all places east of Louisville, Ky Wholesale and Distributing Agents, RICHARDSON DRUG CO., and RILEY & DILLON, Wholesale Liguor Dealers, bgglo’gDSION i BROS. & O oo Families suj H.T.CLA. k'Ba Omaha. Omaha. MEATS ROASTED IN THEIR OWN JUICES, BY USING THE WIRE GAUZE OVEN DOOR FOUND EXCLUSIVELY ON THR CHARTER OAK STOVES #& RANGES. To 1ta Suid Charter Oak same roasted in the using the Wire Gause Ovea Door loses about one pound. and fisvor, BENS POR ILLUSTAATED CIRSULARS AN PRIGE LISTS. it becomes tough, tasteless CHARTER OAK STOVES aud RANGES SONS. Gt HAv Seawias, Nzpraska Ciiv, Nutsox, L Krkinson. 85 & CO.. ... RAUSE, LUBKER & OLDS BKOS. .. HAZLEWOOD, . PA ¢ DDE, 'IMMERMAN & FRAK uvurion, . VakDoN, Display at thelr warerooms, 1305 and 1807 Farnam Street, the largest assortment of Pianos and Organs to be found at any establishment west of Chicago. highest class and medium grades, including STEINWAY, FISCHER, LYON & HEALY ORGAN LYON The stock embraces the PIANOS BURDETT, STANDARD, &HEALY Prices, quality and durabllity considered, are placed at the lowest living rates for cash or time payments, while the long established reputation of the house, coupled with their most liberal Interpretation of the guarantee on their goods, affords the purchaser an absolute safeguard agalnst loss by possible defects in materials and workmanship. LYON & HEALY, 1308 & 1307 FARNAM: STREET'

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