Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 27, 1887, Page 5

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CHE OMAHA DAILY BEE: MONDAY, JUNE 27. 1887, BOUND T0 CET EQUAL RATES, Lincoln's Freight Burean Working Hard to Justify Its Oreation. A PROTEST TO THEBURLINGTON. Af Not Heeded, the Matter to be Taken Into the Courts—The Journal Downed on the Question of Paving. [FROM TIE DEE'S LINCOLN BUREAU.] The effect of establishing a freight bureau in Lincoln is becoming manifest, and the people generally believe that in securing John E. Utt as the commissioner of the bureau that an active, energetic man has been placed at the helm. A short time ago the bureau issued a circu- lar to the Missouri Pacific road showing the discrimination that existed against Lincoln, and Saturday a protest notico was filed upon the Burlington road, which, in effect, states that if the dis- crimination is not removed that every ease will be taken into the courts. In gonversation with one of the gentlemen who has largely interested himself in these matters the statement was made that the point Lincoln business men were Insisting on was not a rate the same a8 Omaha's, but it was for a rate on the whole mileage from Chicago to Lincoln proportionate to the rate given Omaha on the entire mileage from Chicago to Omaha. The form of protest prepared for each business man receiving ship- ments from the east gives full informa- tion in the matter, and if this protest is not heeded every case will be taken in the courts, not only from this time for- ward, but demands for the ex- Ctess received and charged by the company since the 1st of April last when the inter-state commerce law went into effect. Kollowing is the NOTICE OF PROTEST: ‘To the Burlington & Missourl River in Ne- braska and the Chicago, Burlington & uiney Railroad Company ~(owner), Their kents and Attorneys at Lincoln, Neb: ‘'ou will take notice that 1 or we object and rotest against payment of the excessive reight charges that have been and are now eing exacted by your company’s rallroad Ines to this city on and since April 5 last from Chicago “and common points or origi- nating beyond—for example—{rom Chicago: Class 1, $1; class 2, Bic; class 3, 57c: class 4, Blo; elass b, 85c; class A, 40c; class 13, 85c; class C, 38¢; class ), 25¢; class E, 2lci salt, ®06c; hard coal, 25¢, and on lumber from Chi- eago, 0c; Clinton, 2dc; Minneapolis, 28 cents per hundred pounds, and from other n)lnl- nlglner or lower rates according to es- blished differentials based on the Chicago 8| ‘The following reasons are given to justify the action taken in this instance: “I'he rates and charges are unjust and un- reasonable as compared with adjacent and competing points—for example the rates from chicago are: Class 1, %c; class 8, e; class 3, flk".;h\ss 85¢; (‘Enhs Btyes elass C, 83¢; class D, 2c; class E, R0c; hard coal, 20c; and on lumber from C! cago, 20c; Clinton, 18c; Minneapolis, 22, per hundred pounds, other points taking the usual difterentials, based on Chicago, but all Entes are at least six cents per hundred higher to Lincoln than to Omaha or Louisville. A comparison of your existing freight schedule shows that the rates from Chicago to Lincoln verage 118 per cent of the class rates, 130 ;er cent on lumber and 125 per cent on salt and bard coal above rates to Omaha and Loulsville, ‘The distance, via your lines, are, from Chi- 0 to Omaha, 508 miles; from Chicazo to meu 510 ‘miles, and from Chicazo to ineoln, 541 miles. 1f the mileage from Chi- £wgo to Lincoln was applled to the Louisville and Omaha rates on a pmromnnll basis, the xates from Chicago to Lincoln would be 106 per cent of the rates to these points. At present your lines charge and collect more r ton per mile on freight to Lincoln, being @ long haul, than for the short haul to uisville, the latter belng included wholly the former, urrent tariffs from Chicago to Lincoln are s discrimination against this locality, d disregard the existence of similar condi- jons and like eircumstances, Lincoln being » cit of commercial Importance mmmfl:: with Omaha for supremacy in all territory west of the Missourl river, with Illln{lll rior natural advantages over that int. T'he excessive rates to Lincoin are @ result of a collusion between the Missouri ifie, Burlington & Missourl River in Ne- wka, Chicag Burlington & Quincy owners), Union Pacitic, Fremont, Elkborn Missouri Valley rallroads and connections, nmmlnfi lines, eom‘;rnmumg their differ- ences, and placing thls city on an extortion- Ate basis by an unlawful combination, ‘Therefore, I or we, give tinal notice hereby, tl‘:n in due time an appeal will be made to i United States courts and the inter-state mmerce commission for relief in the prem- also clais will be made and payment ansisted on for relmbursement based on ‘equitable rates for all over charges that have accrued or may accrue in shipwents made over your lines since April 5, 1887, ‘This protest is to be signed by the parties suffering from the discrimination and filed ‘With the company, and as stated in the pro- fest, If the relief 1 not obtained recourse ‘will be had to the United States court and $he Inter-state commerce commission, PAVING MATTERS. The action of the council in acceding to the majority petition for vuvinE dis- trict number two with oedar blocks akes the minority, consisting of the tate Journal and the paid attorneys of the other K‘llflfl company, sick to their stomach, but they will apparently have to take their medicine. There is a coterie of men, including the Journal, that insists on ‘'regulating” things with- -out regard to majorities, and it hurts them when the city council, twelve in number, by a unanimous vote, took the word of a majority of the property hold- ers in the second m““].‘ istrict and gave them cedar blocks. Kven the Jour- nal's’ pet democratic mayor, that it bolted the republican ticket to elect, fa- vors block pavement., It comes with wvery poor grace for the Journal. which has feasted and fattened on {ohs and printing steals, to call the twelve coun- cilmen boodlers because they would not bo ‘‘regulated” by a minority. When the editor of the Journal heard that the coancil had met and awarded the con- tract for block pavement, he swore pub- licly on the streets. It is to be hoped, however, that the asphalt company will e 1ze that the Journal has worked for them, and_turn over a fee without hesitancy. The Journal has earned sowething and ought to have it. { ABOUT THE CITY. Farragut post at its last meeting passed strong resolutions on the rebel tlag ques- tion that were adopted vnanimously, In these resolutiqns one was passed especi- ly commending Governor Thayer for is stand taken on the question and the vigorous language expressed by him to the president. The State Journal is tnlkin¥ lustil; against the location of the city hospita! on the city park, and a citizen calls at- fteution to the fact that this is not locat- ing a ‘)esl house or even contagious dis: eases in that locnlitr The Jour should remember that its special pet re- form mayor that it helped to elect was very wan who suggested the location of the hospital at that place. The lrw al election ‘held Saturday re- sulted in the defeat of surface water BOW bonds by a vote of 369 for and 598 nst. At the same time the grant- ::h franchises to the three new street way lines was voted nron and they ‘were carried by a practically unanimous vote. This makes tive franchises granted o street railways the present season .nA.I: number of Lincoln citizens will d “Lfl the Chautaugwa assembly, The Bumber attending from Lincoln the prea* nt year will double the attendanee at te this week for ten days in | any previous year. and several Lincoln citizens have built cottages for the sum- mer meeting on the banks of the Blue. —— A NEW INDUSTRY FOR SUMMER. Hundreds of Chicago Women Making Toboggan, Chicago Herald: “That makes over b said the manager of a knit goods nufactory yesterday, as a young woman with a bundle in her hands closed the door behind her. “1 advertised for women to do crochet work at their homes and I've fairly been besieged with appli- cants ever since.” “Why is there a special demand for crochet work at this season of the yeart” “Toboggan caps,” was the Iaconie reply. “‘You see, we're getting ready for next winter's trade, and, as there seem to be no signs of the toboggan craze dyin; out, we want to lay in a good stock o material to fill the demunds of the Puh- This crochet work is an excellent thing, by the way, and there’'s many a family in Chicago which is entirely sup- ported by it. It doesn’t require much skill, and’a woman with any aptitude for that kind of work can easily crochet ten caps ih the course of a day. We pay 10 cents a cap, kO you Sce & Woman can ake a nice little income out of the work. ange to say, however, most of our ap plicants are married women, who are supported in comfortable style by their husbands. They have everything they want except_pin_money, and they tako this means of getting it. After all, 1t's sort of an amusement for them, too. After their houschold _duties are over, and they find their time hanging heavily on their hands, they can take out a cap and work on it*" ‘Why,’said & woman {o me this morning, ‘I think ll\islsljust a splen- did scheme. "I don’t care 1if [ don't make more than §1 a week;; it will keep me in Some firms tre the make a deposite before they take the work home, but we pever do. I've been in the business over ten years, and I've never known the firm to lose an onnce of material. No, the people who do this kind of work are honest.’ At this ruiut a buxom young matron entered the manager’s oflice, "le:ulmz a little girl by the hand. “Oh, Mr, !t she exclaimed, ““I want material for six dozen caps. We've started a society on the West and we're going to have a capping by y day. It's just too de- lightful for anything, and I'm going to make ever 8o much pin money this sum- mer.” “That ust the way it goes,” said the manager after the applicant for material had departed. ‘Now, Know that woman. Her husband 15 head clerk in a bI{,v store down town, and gets a salary of $1,800 a year. She has no neced of ; it's only a freak in which she has d some of her friends to partici- ‘Chey’ll soon tire of it, though,and then some one morein necd of the money will receive the benefit.” gy | BETRAYED BY HIMSELF. A Fellow Who Didn’t Want to Go to War Gives Himself Away. Cincinnati Star: ‘I remember a funny experience I had during the war," said a leading physician to-day. “I was up at Camp ~ Dennison examining the con- scripts, and many heart-rending pleas for exemption I had to refuse. One day a farmer, a German, a peaceable minded fellow, who thought more of his turnips and cabbage than he did of military glor{ was brought in to me.’’ S joclor,' he said, ‘I am not fit to go to the war, I am all crippled up with rheumatism.’ *“*Where? said I. *‘In my right arm; I can only raise it yoost so high,’ raising hishand about two mflv_:hts from his body with apparent great effort. *‘Well you have got it pretty bad,’ said I, ‘you certainly can't go to war in that condition. How high could you raise your arm before you got rheuma- tism? *'Oh, so mfi ,-8aid he raising his arm high above his, That was just what [ expected, and giving him a push I sent him along out to be sent to the war.” The President's Salary. Baltimore American: A great deal of talk has been occasioned by the mention of the fact that the president always used new money. Some people Jaugh™ at the idea that he handed a crisp new $100 bill to Dr. Sunderland for his marriage fee, apd, aguin, that ho ' put a crisp niow #1 bill in the collection plate at the Oakland church. People said: “Why, the ident must have money made esp: 1y for him.” The truth is, the president always receives new notes direct from the treasury. He never gets old notes, except in change when be pays a bill or makes & purchase, The United States treasurer, on the last day of each month, sends the president his i alary—$4,166.66 —the odd changein bright new silver and copper cents, and the notes all new and of the latest issue. Mr. Cleveland, liko his predecessors, keeps a private bank account wlth_ljrifigs & Co,, and the day after he gets his salary he makes a deposit, reserving enough to pay current ex- penses. It issaid that his account has shown as large a balance as $35,000,as he has an income besides his oflicial salary. Before he entered public life he made from $10,000 to $15,000 a year by his prac- tice,and his expenses were not more than $3,600. He has saved much of his first {cnr‘s salary, but now that he 1s married is expenses will increase. . In meking the assertion that Pozzoni's medicated complexion powder is entire Iy free from injurious or deadly poisons we do it upon the authority of a thorough chemical analysis. It is one of theoldest face powders in American market, and is used in the famalies of some of our most prominent medical men who have personally acknowledged to the proprie- or that they not only considered it harm- ess, but esteemed it highly beneficial in very respect. Sold by all druggists, ey Each ok One Half, “Do you understand about notes of hand?"‘asked one of the market white- hers of a stand-keeper the other day. “I think so." “Wall, [ had a feller's note for $20. It ain't due till de 1st of July, but las’ nite he paid me half of it.” “"And you indorsed the amount on the back of the note?"” I did, hey! Was dat de way to do?” “Of course. How did you do?" “Cut de note in two an’ gin him half!" llb!v= e w the G Il'.lkd B S AL TRy TR MOST WONDERFUL YET, A Wonderful Steam Carriage That is to Go a Mile a Minute. Lewlston, Mo., Journal: “The rich can ride in chaises," and they can ride in a steam wagon, too, if thex will come to Lewiston and e what the teeming brain of a remar! Lewiston inventor has attaned, Ina small one-story building, some- what back from the " dusty highway of Canal street, [ ston, you can find the machine. The buildihg leoks as though 1t had been built for it. It ia about as big as a new-fangled hennery, and has two windows, one in ench side. Glance through the windows and you see a won- derous thing, in wheels, and boiler and smokestack, standing bolt upright in the middle of the floor—a spectacle that, in the days of the Salem witcheries, would have hung the owner of the building and 1ts mysterious contents higher than Haman, But you ask, “Is it mysteriou: Not a bit of it, dear. It is just a modern invention--a big thing to be given out just in kecping with this _latter age, when all the world’s thinking just as tight as it can gallop of how it is possible to move and think faster stil. It 18 a machine to propel you over the country roads a mile a minute. 1t is & contrivance to outrun the wiry “roader,” and to pass the Maud S.sand Jay-Eye-Sece s igh they were hitched to a brick block. 1t is something to climb hills, clatter over pavements, bowl over country roads, ramble over beaches, whisk around cor- ners, back up to basements haul loads on wharves or hum around the race track. It is a steam wagon. It 1severything that the imagination can picture such a con. trivance to be, and, best of all, it scems certain to work; for it is built, so as the professional and unprofessional eye can see, on the commonsense plan,and is fairly bristling with inventions and was well applied. An Auburn clergyman, a local con- noisseur of the horse, an enthusiast on the nineteenth century of American pro- gress, a Sabatis mill owner, the invent- ors and the Journal, seven in all, viewed the machine at 10 o'clock Saturday fore- noon, and the first four named asked more questions than an infant cl; The Enthusiast ge “E" please), was de- lighted, the clergyman unpronounced, the connoisseur exhibited mental reser- vation in favor of the ‘‘nobil animil,” the inventors were calm and confident, the mill owner had seen or heard of such things in Germany, while the Journal was more than pleased.” In the first place it is & wagon. It 13 built on the vrincipal of a grocery wagon. Some of the extra heavy grocery teams on the street might have served for the basis of the contrivance, except the in- ventor, Edwin F. Field, of the firm of Field & Crawshaw, of this city, desired that it be extra strong, and so he had the wheels and axels and cross-bars, etc., built a trifle heavier than on the ordinary grocery wagon, Its shape 18 the same, Its wheels are the same in size and shape. Its wagon body its exactly the same as that of the ordinary delivery vzon, with iron bands. The boil which is upright, sits on the rear axle. Power is avplied by cogged wheels to the rear axle, to which the hind wheels are rigidly aflixed, so that the movement_of the machinery propels thc wagon, The front wheels areindependent of machin- ery, and are simpl cering gear. The engine is a doublé cylinder condensin engine, controllen by the link motion, exactly as in the locomotive. Tt can be reversed or stopped from the driver’s seat. Water iscarried in a small tank under the wagon bed. The engines exhaust into the boiler—the exhaust being easily controlled from the driver’s set The boiler is a five-horse power, tested to 400 pounds pressure, and caps ble of carrying 300 vounds without the slightest difficulty. The engines develop four-horse power with 100 pounds press- ure, or twelve-horse power with 3800 pounds. With hard coal the boiler will make no smoke or steam. The design of the builders is to conceal everything, and they expect: when finished, that the con- trivance will not be very odd in appear- ance, and that it will not frighten horses any more than a bicycle or a street sprinkler. | Every portion of the machinery is made with the view of strength. Various in- ventions on the boiler make it specially valuable, while every part of the engine has been designed and built expressly for the purpose, and is full of oddities and inventions. The axles are stecle and the wheels iron-hubbed. The hind wheels are thirteen feet in diameter. The water tank holds half a barrel and would suflice for a runof twenty-five miles. “‘Have you ever run it?” was asked of Mr. Fields. *‘Yes," was thereply. “We have worked the engines and the wheels, but haven't tried it on the ground yet.” “It was a great succes: The hind wheels went in a perfect buz We i- mated 1t at 80 revolutions a minute, and a8 the carriage will advance about five fect at a revolution, we reckon that,mak- ing due allowance, the wagon would have been going considerably faster than a two-minute clip. I don’t practically see any limit to the attainment of speed except the courage of the driver.' Mr, Field has about completed the ma- chine. A description dces it no sort of credit, and the vublic should see it to appreciate it. There is no sort of doubt but that the machine will go, and but that it can be steered and controlled. From the wayside brook the tank can be filled, and from the coal locker the fires of the boiler, Mr. Field thinks that the machine can go a mile a minute, He will have the hind wheels drilled and corrugated for tecth, provided there is not friction enough, but he says that he has no fear about the friction. —— Germans in London. The Nineteenth Century: There was truth _in the _jest- ssion of a German_ resident: 2 is still_a —— lot of English in London.” A German was more justified in saying this than any other foreigner would have been, for by far the larger portion of the foreign element present n London is recruited from the ‘‘Fath- erland.” The proportion is so high as to be usually estimated at not less than six- sevenths. Whereas the other foreign colonies are more or less limited to cer- tain quarters, the Germans are distrib- uted over all the districts of the colossal eity. According to some their number is 35,000 ,others make it 70,000; a third estimate even doubles this last calcula- tion; but throughout England there can lmnll{ be fewer than a quarter of a mil- lion, it we include the German-speaking Austrians and Swiss. It may therefore be fairly asserted that the German colony m England is, after that of Nort Anmerica, the largest German group in any extra-German state. L IR B The modern German colony of London owes its origin and its extraordinary skrnad in great part to the fact that Queen Victoria, herself the scion of a German (lynasly like her pre- decessor Anne, chose a German prince for her husband. Albert brought over many of his countrymen, directly and in- directly. He was the means of introduc- ing a wider extension of the German language among his adopted oountr{- men, and brlulgin the GGerman name in better odor. It i3 to him and to the events of 1870 and 1871, as well as to the ratnptlc effort of Kinkel, Karl Blind, ‘reiligreth, and many others, that the Germanas settled in England feel them- selves to be Germans avant tout. Unces man em&xrnen his nationality is. as a rule, endangered; the German emigrant, especially, is usually in a great hurrly to throw off the old Adani and identify him- self with the mew .surroundings. It is this very adaptability which has much to abe do with the success which generally at- tends his settlement in foreign countries. The London Germans, however, as whole, do not prove reereants to their origin, and have even taken many en- ergetic measures to assert their German nationality, which they have generully succeeded in maintaming intact. They take lively interest in the moral and in- tellectual efforts and in the political life of their fatherland. ‘T'his wasshown con- spicuously, inter alla, on the oceasion of the Schiller festival in 1850, during the Jast Franco-German war, in the Schlce- wig-Holstein afluir, ete, — e THE TYPEWRITER. What s Required to 1 New York Graphi if 1t is notalreadv, is rapidly becoming mighticr than the pen. There is a typewriter and stenographer attached to all the hotels here asis prob- ably the case in every other city. Some of the stenogravhers are making a great deal of money by a little extra entel prise. To make a_ great success i necessary to combine literary abili with mechanicsl qualifications. ‘The ob- server was talking to the young man at a leading hotel the other day and he re- lated several amusing things in connec- tion with his business. He found when he first started that there were a great many men who made a name for them- selves in the business world who were unable by the use of their pens to com- pose a letter; but they were good taikers. He would take their dic polish it up a little and when the work' was com- plete it possessed sowme literary merit. Of coursge this pleased this class of pa- trons; and many of them who did not write two letters a week would send out treble that number a day. To these men there is a great fascination 1n talking to A stenographer, and a man unaceustomed to it is often astonished at the result of his conversation, particularly when the stenographer looks out for the punctua- tion and superfluous words. By adver- uising in some of the papers he’has been able to get # good deal of hter- rary wol not only from men, but from ladies, Among his patrons are a number of shop girls whose education has been sadly neglect- ed, Still they are ambitious to create an impression that they are not without lit- erary talents. They have love-letters written, winding up with poetry of a most sentimental character. Besides, they admire sceing these produced by means of a typewriter, as it has for them about as much fascination for the spring poet to see his effusions in cold type. This enterprising young man is also called upon to turn out works of fiction, and has written speeches for ward statesmen. But the most amusing feature in this line is the work he does for his male pat- rons. Some of them will start to dictate an ordinary letter; but as Mr. Beacons- field once said, when thoy get to talking they ‘“become intoxicated with the ex- uberance of their own verbosity;" and before they know it they have enough dictated to make a colamn 1n an ordinary newspaper. It has beeome the fashion of a number of New York swells to keep stenographers regularly employed. One well-known dude keeps s diary and dic- tates for two hours every night before he retires, If it could be published it would be pretty sure to make mighty in- teresting roading. It was very amusing a short time ago to hear a western sen- ator, who was dictating to a stenographer inthe corridor of a hotel. He had never been known to make a speech while in the senate, but as he talked to the sten- ographer on this occasion he grew quite eloquent. Suddenly he forgot his sur- roundings and let himself out. He walked up and down and talked in a very loud tone, gesticulated with both hands, and soon had quite an audience, but he kept right ahead and was unem- barrassed. Thero are lots of people who dictate out loud in the corridors of the hotels simply to attract attention, and it tickles them greatly it you stop and lis- ten to them. re Success. he_typewriter, s it has ——— For fear of loosing a day’s work, many persons put off taking physic until Sat- urday. The better plan is to not delay but take it as soon as needed, it may save you a hard spell of sickness. 1f you want the most benefit from the loast amount of physic without causing you any inconvenience, loss of appetite or rest, take St. Patrick’s Pills. Their action on the liver and bowels are thorough, they give a freshness, tone and vigor to the whole system and act in harmony with nature, ——— ‘Who Built Atlanta? “Why, this looks like a northern city!" That is the first remark the northerner makes who is permitted the felicity of looking on this fair town, says the At- lanta Constitution, The bustle, the rush, the fine buildings, the gencral get-up and hustle sort ot atimosphere, bids him to fatter the average northern city by com- parison. His next remark is: *‘Well, I've always heard it was built by northern men and capital, and I guess it must be so."” But it wasn’t. It was built by ‘“‘crackers.” By young fellows 1n jeans and homespun who came up from Georgia country sides—by young confederates, who came in from the neighborhood in their faded gray clothes, and east Tennessee rebels who drifted this way because their own country was too hotto hold them, From every com- munity and country cross-road in Georgia come the men who made At- Ianta, as the veins of the human bmlly lead back to the human heart, Of all cities, this is pre-emmently the home of the *‘cracker''—buiit by his energy and dominated by his ideas. We have in twenty-one years, starting from such desolation as can barely be conceived,accumulated $35,000,000 worth of reaity (not counting the suburbs) bmlt sixty-seven churches, furnished free schools for eight thousand children,spent millions of dollars in streets, gatnered 65,000 inhabitants, and made such a reputation for euterprise that Chicago is flatterca when she 1s fondly alluded to as “the Atlanta of the west.” —~~—— Faults ot digestion cause disorders of the liver, and the whole system becomes deranged. Dr. J. H. McLean’s Strength- ening Cordial and Biood Purifier perfucts the process of digestion and assimilation and thus makes pure blood. AL A D L S Evergreen Trees. Germantown Telegraph: Besides pro ducing a nk-,usindg landscape effect that can be produced in no other way, the planting of evergreep, trees affords a protection from cold winds in winter to the dwelling and outbuildings. Spruce, fir, and arbor vit:e treeg are free growers, and if set when quite small, the ac. will be more nkely to be attended with suc- cess than if the trees are larger. The protection which they afford to orchards often produces excellent results. Where, for eflect,s circular enclosure was formed of arbor vitm surrounding a pear tree, the size of the fruit and increased pro- ductiveness of tho trees as compared with others outside were marked. The same was true of trees setin the row with the evergreens, showing con- clusively the favorable influence exerted by them. 1t Goes Without Saying! That Allcock’s Porous Plasters are ap- proved by the leading medical men in the country. That they are the original and genuine Fu;ouu plasters upon whose reputation mitators have traded. That Alicock’s Porous Plasters are the )\Il(gll;eit result of medieal science and skill. That in ingredients and method they have never been equalied. That Alleock’s Porous Plasters have never yet failed to do their work quickly and effectually. 2 REAL ESTATE, Transfers Filed June 24, 1887, Frederick W White and wife to Fred W Fiteh, lot 8 Yates & Reed's subdiv of lot 7 Ragan's add, w d.. J T Wileox and wife to Cornel Scoye, 135,03 acres in 6 10 10, w d David R Archer et al trustee to Cl ence H Sobotker, lots 567 § blk 1, lot 24 bik 4 Cotner & Archer’s add to S O0m, wd. Geo H Fitehett to David It Arclier, lots 5 blk 1. lot 6 blk 3, Cotner & Ar- chers add 10 S 0, W d.'vueieiies s David R Archer and Sami Cotner trus- tees to Geo L1 Fitenett, lots 3, 9,19, 20 21, 24 bk 1, lots 318 14 blk 10s 2 3.6 15 blk 4, Cotner & Archers add to 8 O, In trust for sald Cotner, T Fitchett to said Cotner and his heirs; also its 12323 blk 1 and lot 0 blk 8 said add for David R Archer, W d...oouvususes Geo H Fitchett to Saml Cotner, lots 8 0 1920 21 24 bk 1, lots 456 13 18 14 blk 2:lots 23615 bik 4, Cotner & Ar- chers add to 8 O, w d. avid R Archer et al trus Fitchett, lot 4 blk 13 lots 3, 38 blk 2; 1ots 23 4 24 blk 8, lot 5 blk 44 Cotner & Archers add to S O, w d 8,000 Leonard R Bloedel and wife to Steph- en K Jackson lot 11blk 11, Patrick’s 2ndadd, w d.... Jos Barker ot al to 0 9 bik 9, Meyers, Richards & Tilden’s add, wid. Ve S M H Clark, trustee, to Lena Olsen, lot 14 blk 5 West Side, wd ........ . 500 Samuel Cotner and wife to Jas N Buchanan, lot 16 blk 8 Hanscom Place,wd ... R i West Side Building Asso. to Samue Howell,lot 22 blk 10 Hanscom Place, 1.250 2,000 i Tucas and wife to 1, A 3 Tt of e 45 1t of lot 2 blk Price, 40 acresin 7, 16,13, wd... Omaha and Florence Land and Trust Co to Jas F Ransom, | 18, 19blk 112 Florence, q ¢ Mary Itooney and C McCluskey, lots 7, 8, 9, 10, blk 1 Roon adda, wd John R. Cox et al to Murry M Mar- shall et al, lots 1 to 10 inclusive, blk 2 Cloverdale, wd Geo H Hess to Wm 'l of lot 4 blk 201, qe Wm F Manning to Wm T Seaman, w 44 ft o lot 4 blk m Wi T Seaman Veeder, 144x85 ft com at nw co Tot 4 bik 201, wd. PR | Martin G Griflin t G Wallace, l(|Lfil 3, 4. 5, blk 1, Fred Dellone’s add Arthur S Potte Goulding, 1o Geo F Robbins to John D Ell&s lot 6 blk 7, Hillside add No 1, wd.... § Chas F Pof t 23 blk 1, Potter’s add, w d. Arthur S Totter and wife to ‘Sarah'J’ Ghrisle, Iot 6 blk 2, Lotter's' add, w caman, w44 ft and wife 24 bik 1, Potter’s add, Arthar § Potter and wife to Iiiram M Goulding, ot 5 blk 2, Potter’s add, W Wm J Paulto Frank Benham lot 9 blk 3, s & Hills 2d add, wd........ Frederick H Davis and wife to Mury C Cunningham, lot %, Fairmonnt Place, wd.. . Fred W Welcher and wife to A Comstock lots 15 to 20 inclusive, 2, Mayne's add, wd.. veee A 8 Patrick to Fielder hillips et al, lot 6 blk 1. lot 5 blk 3, A S Pal rick’s add, wd.. 4 eeanise Amanda M Cartrigh! Geo W Covell, undivided of lot 8, blk 2, J L Redick’s subdiv, q_c. B John A Horbach and wife to Michael "m“l{ © portion ot lot 33, Horbach’s 1stadd. wd Rl Bhe Married a Wit. Arkansaw Traveller: ‘“‘Never marry a man of wit,’’ said a female member of a well-known literary society, addressing a woman who had just been admitted, “for what was wit before marriage be- comes satire nfterward.” “That's a fact,” replied the new mem- ber, ‘‘for before marriage Calvin was the laughingest and wittiest man I ever saw, and now he is"’—— “*Satirical?'’ added the old member, “Oh, awfully so. He just sits right down and I can't get a word out of him, I can stand him as long as he talks, bu when he beconies satire it breaks me al to pieces."’ e Are you weak and weary, overworked and tired? Hood's Sarsaparilla is jusg the medicine to purify your blood and give you strength. UITE UP TO THE TIMES, New Applicani—Do I know how to use Eapolio? Well, that'a frosh | Do Ilook like s girl who don't Xknow about Bapolio? Am I blind, d'yer think, or can't read? Why, thie babics on tho bisck know all about Bapolio. st are yeo givin' me? SAPOLIO 18 8 #olid, handsome cako of House-cleaning Soap, which has 10 equal for all scouring purposcs, ex- cept the laundry. Perhaps you have heard of it & thousand times without using it once. If you will Teverse the position and uso it once you will praise it to othors a thousand times, Ask your grocer for a cake, and try it in your next house-cleaning. No.8. [Copyright, March 1857.] HAY FEVER. NOTICE—All sufferors frem Hay Fever who will use tho Smoke Ball and **Debollator agesix weeks prior to Augustlst, 1887, and have the first symptoms of tho diseaso apponr fter that date, we will REFUND THE MONEY ast summer this remedy was used by many ferers, and gave satisfaction in every ‘Carbolic Smoke" gives immediate rolief fn arrh, Asthma, Bronchial and Throut Affec- Headache, Croup, Colds, Lung Diseases ud if tuken in_connection with our Debol: t is Warranted (o cure every case, A Freo Toat at our offce purlors. Sent by all on receipt of price, moke Ball, 82, Debellator §1 v s CARBOLIC SMOKE' BALL CO., Room 11 Creighton Block, Omaha, Neb: TWESK, UN, ELOPER.LARTS 408 (sealcd) free. WEviCA1 o, Bubialo, N Y. FAMOUS, BELLE - BOURBON For Medicina ABSOLUTELY PURE Is Death to MALARIA, CHILLS AND FEVER, TYPHOID FEVER, BOWEL TROUBLES, LOSS OF APPETITE, INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA. Sold Only In Botties. For Sale by Orugglsts Everywhers. i s x Oy BQURBON INFY OB HONINY PART OF THE - ITOF FUSEL 01 BEFORE 1T 15 DISTI 10 YEAR OLD WHISKEY and Family Use. . NO FUSEL oiL! Sure Cure for CONSUMPTION, BLOOD POISONING, SLEEPLESSNESS OR INSOMNIA, NON-ASSIMILATION OF FOOD, PRICE, $1.28 For Quart Bottle. For Sale by Grocert and Wire Merchanty Everywhore, eam DlsmiLLER This 1s to cortify that I havo examined the sample of Lawrency substand trom & Co., and found tho same to be Display at their warerooms, 1306 and 1307 Farnam Street, the largest assortment of Pianos and Organs to be found at any establishment west of Chicago. The stock embraces the highest class and medium grades, including STEINWAY, FISCHER, LYON & HEALY ORGAN PIANOS BURDETT, STANDARD, LYON&HEALY Prices, quality and durability 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 against loss by possible defects in materials and workmanship. LYON & HEALY, Five Sizes. any other. 1305 & 1307 FARNAM STRERTS New Model Lawn Mower Will cut higher grassthan Has no equal for simplicity, durability and ease of operation. This is the latest Improved Ma- chine in the Market. Low Prices. Send for circulars. PHIL STIMMEL & CO. State Agents for Porter’s Ha, RELIABLE OMAHA, NEBRASKA, l:x Tood an dJobbers of Binding Twis JEWELER. Watches, Diamonds, Fine Jewelry, Silverware The largest stock. Prices the lowest. Corner Douglas and 15th streets, Omah; PacificRailroad Company. Repairing a specialty, Work warranted, a. Licensed Watchmaker for the Union For Imperfect Digestion Disordered Stomach, Withou % Against the ills From ill-cooked m muy arise. and lengchy ridos. their call, BLZTER onguers ol EDUCATIONA! ALBANY LAW SCHOOL, Thirty-sixth year begins Sept. 6th, 1837, For circulars or special informuation address Horaoce E. Smith, L. L. D. Dean, Alban WoodbridgeBrothers STATE AGENTS FOR THk Decker Brothers PIANOS. OMAHA, NEBRASKA. PENNYROYAL PILLS “CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH," riginnl and Only Genuine. s of worthleas Inlitlons WAME PABER Seld everywh hichase R D ST Bk o S —— SCIENTIFIC —— RUPTURE GURED. By Dr. Snediker's method. No operati o well us grown poopl ninis 0n dle. A b1iai s CONSULTATION FRER. PROF. N, D. COOK, Room 6, 1514 Douglas St., Omahs, Neb. ———— e e e e ABSOLUTE PERFECTION IN BAKING —AND ALL-- MEATS ROASTED IN THEIR OWN JUICES, BY USING THE WIRE GAUZE OVEN DOOR FOUND EXULUSIVELY ON THE &/ MARVELOUS RESULTS L0SS IN SHRINKAGE OF MEATS, Very fow peonle know that the Shrinkago of Mosts o om th roasted in Al d only ¢ s that {4 Fution of the juloe, which Effect of the SOLID OVE! N pound Sirloin, v A oF Tive to forts per r cont. of water ‘mattor, and the o 1w ¥4 pe wt. of th Mo anormous Loss oF ¥ S I ved UZE OVEN Door. TEN pounl i e Wil e woduced (0 nine | maat, snowing u hin Lons in five e very small LONA G SEND FOR ILLUSTRATED GIROULARS AND P CHARTER OAR STOVES and RANGES aro BOLD IN KEBRASKA as follows: JERS & SONS OmANA, q y ..Goxuo. HasTings, PLATTSMOUTH, STERLING, . SrroMsBURG, & FRAKER,

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