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

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

LECAL BARRIERS SWEPT AW AY The Supreme Court’s Opinion On the Registration Law. ALL ITS PROVISIONS VOID. Judge Reese Says It Is So Crudely | Drawn Up That Its Fnforcement Would Have Been Impractic- able—District Court. [PROM THE BEE'S LINCOLN BURFACT.] The long-looked-for decision on the regis- tration law was handed down yes! Judge Recse. The opinion, which is very voluminous, is in effect that the entire regis- tration law is unconstitutional aod that all scts under its provisions are void. The sub- stance of the decision is clearly stated in the following syllabus prepared by the court: State ex rel. Stearns vs O'Connor. Quo war- rauto. Judgment of Custer. Opiuion by Reese, J. 1. Under the coastitution ot the Nebraska which prescribes t. of voters, and provides that all be free, and-there sball be no hi impediment to the r 10 exercise the electiv tion law w of the right to vote un of four s, the last prior o 2 Arc & register s ates such regis f of the electc night req n such reg reasonabls proof of his righ ction at the time of offer: d; but where it absc lector of bis vote tered upon certain days named is void. 8. A registry law, to b be val e <nv\ rt or Shreasonably impede the o St., 54 4. The act to amend_ the electic metropolitan cities and cities of the first class in the state of Nebraska (Laws of 3 being in controvention of that clause of the constitution that ill shall contain more than one subject, which shall be clearly ex- pressed in its title, and no law shall be amended unless the new act contains the tion. or sections, so amended, and the or sections so amended shall be void. The following decisions were 3 Delaney d con- 2. Where a contract hn been reduced to Writing, as a gener: w, verbal evi- is not iven of what passed between the parties, either before t ‘written instrument was made, or du t f 'its prepuration, 8o a8 to 4dd to or subtract from, or in any manner 0 vary or aualify the wr tract., act has been reduced to sud part] engrafted written agr from Di by Maxwe 1. Where there is a conflict in the mony and it is equally ba will not be weight of e testi- anced, & verdict 2. In Held, 10 be xtr‘ dA ated upx and not errc Error from Doug- H.flh~) th. R Opinion by Max rsed. cible entry and detainer ivil remedy t n ses unlawfu ithheld from the stain the that the party u in possession refuses to vacate th lawful uotice so o do 22 Kas., will be suffic forcible detaine pre Campbeil v! pproved and fol- ig, 5 Neb., 419. . M. Strong, of Dodge county. and W. A. MeAllister, of Platte count were admitted to pra Gy wing causes were ar- ed and st Sturtevant vs Wine- raiiway company ; Omiaha & Republican Valley rail way company vs Brown. IN DISTRICT COURT. In district court yesterday, Judge Chap- man, who returned from Kearney in the morning, resumed while Ju Field heard the c were tried with- dutajury. The case on trial the day before ‘was given to the jury at 10 o'clock and an- ze sther jury was at once impaneled in the libel against me suit brought by Leonard H. K. State Journal company. stated heretofore, Mr. for 5,000 for the pul defamatory articl The artic i I's g to the Journal a year leges um Mr. King was snd was forcibly ejected A trial shortly’ after ared Mr. King from bad ctions at the o g and th for dam- ages was shortly after institited. The tak- iug of evidence was commenced in the case yesterday. The trial promises to be of no Temarkable interest. e E Rheumatism. is undoubtedly caused by lactid acid in the blood. Thisucid atlacks the fibrous tissues, and causes the pains and aches in the back, shoulders, knees, aunkles, hips, and wri Thousands of people Bave found Hood's Sarsaparilla a itive cure for rheumatism. This edicine by its purifying action neutra- lity of the blood and also Builds up and strengthens the whole body. from the meeting the county court e e Real Estate Transfers. to James F Zendall's add to $ 1,200 Danicl Ryan, lot 2, bl Omaha, wd csesesee Ellis L Bierbower, » shal, to James M Woolwortk, 1ot 2, bik 6, in Shull's add to Omaha, marshal doed. Arthur C Wakeley to Alexander Lemm, lot 14 in Barker's sub of the ne X of the i of sec 04, tp 15, nof r 930 Charies Wilson atapoint 37 ft n of the s line 2 in Himebauzh Place, runnis cen 34 ft, t 160 ft. thence s 34 1t oW i ft 10 place of begin beivg 34x160 it wad . 2,000 Allen A Koch and Oriama A~ Koch, husband and wife, to James E An. derson, the undivied 3 interest of lot4, Lik 1, in the sub div of J 1 Redick to fhe city of Omaba, wd... 2,000 Charles C Houw | Maria J Housel, husband and wife. 10 F M Couners, Baiotiott in A H Suunders add 14 Omaba, w d S00 Samue! E Rogers and \1.nm husband and w that part of lots 5 an \bo Improvement associotion’s ‘sdd aha, beginning at the south- . corner of said lot 5 and running thence north along east Line of 15th S, 47 ft, thence east 102 fi, thence south 47 {1, thence west 103 ft to place of beginning, wd ... Jucob Kocherthal and wife and Moses Kocherthal and wife to Sarah Bern stein, n 2 ft of the s 44 1t of Lhe €35 ftof lot 1. blk 1 in the city of Omaha, cq... 1 William A Shermand wife snd Jesse ft of jot 86 in Gise: ®dd to Omaha, wd..... . 3,500 E Bertrund and wife to Henry Rick, strip of land 7 ft wide along tht n side of the w % of "the s 137 f1 10\“.(!“ add 1o Owmaha, wd 1 Nels H holm (single) m!‘xhrm! M Fairield, Jot 8, bik 8, in McCor- s 20d add to Omaba, q¢... omas B Norris and Bertha L'} ris to Johu Carmod bik &, in Dwight & Omaha, w d Thomas R Wing Mary 8 Wells, s 5 of lot 1 Omaha, w d 1,000 200 Trimbic and Georze W Howard, 1o 10in King's udd i eity of Om [ 900 E !wm H Sherwood amd w Irvington Congregational soc for church purposes obly, beg. at 4 point £13 feet south and i3 feet east of the quarter section cor on the north 1 n»nl-«uvn 34in t 16 north ; thence east 130 feet ; ) feet; thence west ce morth 530 fi ning containing 93 Th . 13,600 yup, 4 yuble 2-story 6,000 800 200 first, to cost {rame barn, v st n Ungratefunl Son. g but an ex- Mrs. Dorsey is a to walk children ping out although mforts of her home, has failed to help suppogt her, and s periodically to come rs disagreeable for * he tore the stthe fragments int met with the same Iu'e She therefors swore out a warrant for his arrest last evening and he vas locked up. Wreck on lho Union Pacific. n to warn all approaching Monyhan, the en e No. S16 with an extra from t the fiagman, but the train was such headway that he was unable to fore he was off the track. rail the engine turned to the ri stopped right across the second track s The tender became detached, and it with six cars went into the ditch to the left, two of them being totally wrecked. Oneof these vi ded with fruits, but these were dam- t slightly. Fifteen cars were more or less broken but $3,000 will probably cover everything. A hundred dollars will pat the locomotive in good t.nm again. A Neighbor Quarrel in Court. John Benson is lying in a cell at the cen- tral pol on charged with za s of stovepipe from Mrs. The two are neighbors, and a stove the lot _of ‘When he \amv out to get his or two ago. she demanded pay for "Benson refused to give her any- thing, but, wait carried the s pened to be two v th here hap- pipe with it rt, and she speedily t y and swore out a charge of larceny against Benson. It was served on him yesterday and he will be tried to-day. Sning a Railroad. Hans P. Jensen, according to & petition filed with the clerk of the district court this morning, asks that the B. & M. railroad com- pany pay to him the sum®of $5,000 for injuries receivad under the following conditions: About the middle of last September Jensen purchased a ticket for Central City, and after riding several miles was informed that the train went only as far as Aurora. Jensen then asked that the train be stopped at Hamp- ton where he had friends. The train slacked up at this station and Jensen jumped, his foot being caught in the wheels and crushed so mputation was necessary. Wants Her Baby's Father. A Swedish young lady named Lizzie Swan- sou has sworn out a warrant for the arrest of Ferdinand Hansen, whom she claims is the father of her baby girl, aged nine months. At the time of the birth of the child Han- sen skipped for unknown parts, but has lately returned “fuses to do anything for t he promised faithfully to marry her before he accomplished her ruin All that she asks for is proper maintenance for her cluld. Unegualled—Dr. Sag. edy. Catarrh Rem- — Veterans Secure Mark Twain. A committae appointed by the Custer post, G. A. R, met yesterday afternoon in Major Keat's ofice and wade arrangements for an entertainment to be of the under the auspices post on e Qrawing card w That dread terror of mothers. eating eroup, is speedily subdued by using Dr, . H. McLoan's Tar Wins Lung Baim.” 25 conisa botile. Marttie Wood Bound Over. The preliminary examination of Mattie Wood, the colored who stabbed s held She was put the district C Alws Green last F riday evening, wi v rt Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. When sbe was & Child, she cried for Castoria, Wheo she became Miss, sbe clung to Cestiria, Whea sbe kad Children, she gave them Castoria. A wreck occurred on the Union Pacific | near the Twentieth flH‘fll crossing, about 4 | 'A SPLENDID BRIDAL GIFT. | | One Million Dollars in Government Bonds. A BACHELOR'S SERIOUS ERROR. Cornalba The Danseuse—The New Order of Women—New Eves in the Commercial Garden—Clara Belle's Letter. NEw Yonrg, Oct. 18.—[Correspound- ence of the BEE.]—A hundred bridal giftslay on & table in a parlor. They were a variety of articles from silver- ware to fans, from screens to diamonds, and guests were passing from one to an= other in a critical examination. On one stand was a low, oval glass case, and it was observable that close by stood two men who never stirred from their stations. They were guardians of that one present. that would fly off if uncovered? Possi- bly, for “‘wealth takes wings.” Gazing into the case the visitors saw a loose heap of government honds. Their value was a million dollars. That was the bridal gift of Morris, the Craesus of lottery men, to his daughter ou her marriage to Thurlow Weed Barnes, nephew of the late Thurlow Weed. wedding was el respects, and even bonds are common in aspect, but what a quantity 1 he of eager interest did center in the mill- | ioned event! gard wedloc I went with a girl friend yesterday to see her beautified. The place was no factory of hair colorings or com. hes, but the highly professional ew York hospital, one of our great public benefactions, and_the beautifier aid and orthodox Dr. Bull. The save that guration known as The improvement will make her entirely kissable. Too few parents are willing, through false kindness to their children or through ignorance, to submit their little ones to the knife of the surgeon at an early age,and asa result we have arounj us unsightly rsons who might have had th eatures moulded into those of good- looking men and women. The case in point was that of a girl about seven- teen who had a single harelip with pro- trusion of the teeth of the upper jaw. There was also acleft in that jaw which, of course complicated the deformity. Had the operation been performed in infancy, the chances are that the woman would have shown very slight, if any traces of THE SURGEON'S WORK. And were they not re- as troly “the holy bonds of but as it is a more or less plain scar will always be visible. She was put under ether, and a small s off one side of the fissure in the lip and aslice off the other side., nearly, but not quite to the bottom of the lip. Then these two raw edges were brought to- gether and stitched: and the piece of that re ned from the second in- cision was carried along the base of the lip so that no indentation should be afterwards observed. The surgeon’s plastic hand now went to work to fash- ion the disfigured member into one that should serve her well for the remainder of her days. This then completed the lip and there was left only the protrud- ing teeth to remedy. With two or three sharp blows of the mallet upon the chisel the top part of the two sides of lh' jaw were separated, brought into on by depressing them “and se- 1in place. Then the operation ended and it showed immediate signs of great | and lasting improvementin appearance, one which cannot fail to be of vast ben- efit to her as a woman. She has never voluntarily smiled since she was old enough to known of her disfiguration, so fearful was she of displaying it. month hence she can begin a life of smiles. : A tasse for the grotesque and horri that leads men to wear skulls for pins and coffins for sleeve buttons, t induces a dainty girl to choose a dr with snakes outlined on it, and a metal spider perched at her throat, has got into architecture. I went to call, and, mounting the steps, laid my hand carelessly on the iron rail that meandered up the stone stoop. To ho 1 on the head of a bronze snake that was coiled und the balustrade. I stood aghast and looke The whole row (-I fine houses had the same sort of approach, and twisting about all the hand-rails was the vile serpent with battered head and baleful eyes—natural and hideous enough to make one afraid to enter or leave the house. It's to be hoped old Major Jim Jams never rents one of 'em; he’ll come some night from the club and break his neck in a fit at his own door. Ttisa bad practice to write several letters at one job, enclose them in en- velopes and address the batch. Many accidents occur. A gentleman who uses ncil for his correspondence, but mn]:e the superscriptions in ink, wrote the three following epistles, secured them in envelopes and laid them in order on his de The first was to his prospective mother-in-law, the second to his latest and best girl, and the last to his tailor. Discovering that the ink was absent in the stand, he left his desk for a moment. A clerk in secarch c ruler took up the top letter that upon the article, and put it below th ml- nded for the 5 the com- lete er. He addressed etter first in the row to his coming mothe law, the next to Maude, and the misplaced epistle to the tailor. At 4 o'clock that afternoon a military look- ing female, sitting beside an in zhter, got black in the face as read on the stamped paper of the ~d son-in-law: gm\ mine—Y t will be able after all” to get away. Have sprung the tallest kind of a stal on the ’umpire, which I_will tell you n we meet. Takea car w0 , and get there at sharp 8 stite for a good supper, YOU SWEET LITTLE TOAD, it will be a long day for your old man, but 8 o’clock will have to make a lan ing, and then hurrah!” T wuy the lightaing struck in on Up town in a gorgeous flat d over mystic epist fraud, that cheviot was the worst job that ever wasdone. 1 thought the checks beat the world giving me re worse than ever. have to try some one and [ don't wantto, but you are nly getting infernally careless. let you have some money during th, but I'm beastly hard up just At the moment shat Maud was ing her sweetheart was gonme co mn‘-u y mad, and that an infuriated middle woman wus making her \w‘u,m 0o go down town, Gmrwe. tailor studied this document with a dazed expression: “‘Kindest of friends, t k to my little one this - unpleasant news. No Georgie to-night. The bank has a meeting that fits. but h [ shall else, Was there some- | thing in that glass receptacle alive and | zantly plain in | will doubt necessitate a run {from here to Boston; will wire you in the morning if that should be the case. How sad that t can’t be u\umud. but business is busi- | ness, and it’s for both your dear sakes that T must attend to this little matter. With my love and a kiss, your troubled lad.” AtSa cab containing a lady no % | stood in Vessey street writing for a gentleman, who bounced the door open and blurted out to the driver the name of a restaurant. ““Now, my little girl, tell me all the news.” he added, as he sprang in; and his blood froze and his hair rose as his | mother-in-law said: will.” | Cornalba is one of the three or four premier danseuses who, for a number of | years, have led the ballets in grand operas and other pretentious stage en- | tertainments. you can recall “her at | all, you will doso as a little woman of 'thm) -five, with an intellectual face, willowy figure and iron toes. Do you ever think of these dancers as ordinary women, in the garb of their sex, and as doing anything else than whirling and tip-toeing in a theatre? Morello isan Ttalian who keeps one of the nurgerous table d’hote restaurants in New York. I the rest, he sells to you for a dol- | lara dinner composed of paccaroni, grease and some other thibgs. Iate | there yesterday. Into the room came a woman who first attracted my attention by the fact that she wore neither hat “You villain, I alodger. When I looked again herface became familiar. “*Who is she?” I asked of Morello. “I | recognize her face well enough, but I can’t place her *That is my wife id the caterer. “:Then probably I have not scen her. I was mistaken.” 0, no; SHE 1S CORNALBA, the danseuse.” Thus are our stage fairies shockingly related to humdrum life. The largest assemblages of feminine beauty in America_are at what are “professional” or “‘authors’ " ma- 1ees in this city. tin On these occasions the house is practically [ree to ac- tresses at a time of disengagement. One of them occurred this week. At least six hundred women were there,and the majority were young ac- tresses, ranging from Mrs. Lang- try and Mrs. Potter in beauteous fame to exhibits from the burlesques and comic opera choruses. Langtry sat between a girl from the mute but lovely rear vow of a current travesty anda pupil from a school of acting, €ither of whom was handsomer than she. When it is considered that physical beauty is the most important elementin the selec- | tion of actresses, and that New \uk is largely composed of actresses was mar- vellou handsome. A goodphotograph of that crowd with their vast variety of beautiful faces, and their actresy pic- turesqueness of attire, would be a pic- | ture to never tire of looking at. A woman somewhat distinguished in social life said to me: “I have been greatly edified with a descriptlon in a series of articles on the eflect upon women of ~)_THE NEW ORDER OF THINGS. | in New York,which brings several thou- | sands of girls into relation with men in businessr The articles were filled with interviews with men, who all declared that if anything was needed to make the fair sex perfect, it was to set them side by side with male clerks and em- les in the offices and counting-rooms own town. These gemlcmen forgot what all the great writers of this mor- tal world have declared, that woman is 8 mystery past finding out: aud all leap into the subject boldly only to find it over their depth and to be put to the necessity of swimming out ungracefully. The manager of & telegraph of- fice remuarks that the girls in his employ pick out the best opera. | tors for husbands, as if that was a proof of their smartuess, whereas if they were so wonderfully keen they would not marry any telegraph operators at all, not even the best. He declares that this new race of women; the type- writers, clerks, cashiers and errand girls, are never insulted by the men, do not lose their femininity in the least, just as well as other women left at , knit and sew during the lunch- eon hour, develop their minds so as to read even the financial columns in the newspapers, take home the magazines, beautify the commonest rooms in the meanest tenements, and never are known 10 be concerned in a single scan- dal, such as are found in the churches pper-tendom. nonse nsell, $ho woman ex: claimed; “such delicious dreaming! ¥, when I read about these new Eves n} the new commercial Garden of . I was nssibly be Ealdens T s o and dwn town with in the cars occasionally: the same | n at [ am forever meeting on the 3 But ll.v\ re is uo mistake about And yet men that series of discoveries our . They are cert: to do For two reason: fi ause half le sex bas & eapacity for being romance about women, of which no one has yet second, b.u-au- ve it with thoughts of substituting and will discharg Iuruu r reduce the wages u( m- ir gms **As proof of the sudden elevation of womanhood it- is announced that the girls nor wrap, and was therefore manifestly | cashier of the largest ladies® shopping store in town is & young girl. DBut she is paid only one-half what a competent man would get. Another notable in- stance of the wondlers of the female revolution is that all the clerical work of & certain large concern on Broadway is performed by beautiful young ladies in fashionable gowns. I sincerely trust that the reference is not to the estab- lishment that is pointed to by all its neighborhood with a very RIGID FINGER OF SUSPICION because the employer and the beautiful young girls are known to go into the country together over Sundays—one this = Sunday and another the next—and to lunch with him one at a time, and to quit work and stroll uptown with him, and I know not what the merchants of the district do not say. But no woman withany gump- tion or judgment would dwell upon cases like that as representative of female working life, for it does not take much experience or penetration to know that women who drudge and toil for the wages the sex get in this city must be made of mugi fibred virtue. and hard work are not frien not often caught in the societ other. Butitisa wee little trifle too much to read of elevating the young woman by putting her at work at men’s work just when they are in the midst of a ten years spell of wonder- ing what can be done to rescue yoursex from the injury this life is doing to it. For that is exactly my case. For years I have been perplexing my- self with wonder when the world would wake up this abuse of women. I would rather have the the stage reformed, the ballot purified, the pulpit unsexed, the laws invoked against women’s work in ehops and factories or any hundred of a thousand awfully radical things done o release my sex {rom this yoke of man’s greed, than have the present state of things continue.” That is bitter talk, truly, came from a woman who hi thropically studied the subject. CLARA BELLE. rior excellence proven in millions of Do ot There D quarter of a century, Tt 13 used by the United Btates Government. d by the heads of the gTest universities, rongest, Purest and Most Heathfal, Dr. Price's the only Baking Powder that doed Bot contaln Ammonia, Lime oF Alum. Sold oaly in cans PRICB BAKING POWDER m Chicago. New Yorl Mertt will wia and recelve public recognition and praise. Facts, which are the outcome of general ex perience, growing through years of critical and practieal test, become as rooted and immovable as the rock of Gibraltar n public opiuion, and Lenes- forth need uo further guaraatee asto thelr gemu ineness. The {adisputable fact that Swift's Bpecite 18 the best biood purifier 2 the world, is one of these y 1 R T - bas Belr tostimonials Are herewith sib Imitied to the public without further comment—let x- peak for Liezmaei e ‘are well Knowa circies ia Th18 e3aniry 454 13 Euloper Razdoew's Test New Youx, May &, 1887, Swift Specific Company, Atlanta, Ga. : le!km‘-—-fl.' been anncyed 'lfl i‘lun of my h lur ‘more than & !w Xlnd % preparation'c :k:‘r;r;.-ak-wnu(«& hea § pros ne yeician treatment roceive 9y 7aet 1 then concinded 1o try the & £ 8 Yo =0 "Tor the bioo, sad fve oF 63 thorough ersdication of my trouble aad res 1. Bave made me Bappy. Sive s Tnie”Leatimonial for buch ube y'8s y0u wish to “make of It. “asRioTTs Rawpow, =) Bmeryv Bear Canal Sirest. Hago Haskerl's Testimony. The Bwits §jecitc Company, Atlacta. Ga. Treatiss "w Bioad asd Skia Discases matied frea. TEs Swirr Srmcinc Co., Depwer & sthaata. Ga ¥ DECAY dw N INSANITY, dhoui consult at once TED Dr. Clarke, Established CDr- Glarke has made NERVOUS DE: CHRONIC and all Diseases of TRINARY Organs & Life B Mares NO Sifierence WHAT you bave taken or WH O has failed to cure you. S& FEM A LES suffering from diseases pecu- 0 their sex can consult with the assurance of speedy relief and cure. Send 2 cents postage for works on your di Sarse: iseases. nd & cents postage for Celebrated Works oo Chronic, Nervous and Delfs gate Discases. Cousalfation, perscnally of by tter, free. Consult the old tor. . Offices and parlors contemplating Marri Inrke's celcbrated gui e and Femnale, each 1sc. both {gamps). Before eonfiding sour case, oo LARKE. A fricudl save future suffert years o life. & 1 Ere rors,” fc. (stampe). e and writings Eeniteverywhere, | secure from €XpOSHFe. Hours, 810 8: Sundays, 9t012. Address, CLARKE, M. D. 186 So. Clark St., CHICAGO, ILL. AsK your retaller for the JAMES MEANS $4 SHOE JAMES MEANS $3 SHOE, according to your needs, like .-WL ng B ¥m ) NO o vital respect equal ta the Land-sewed Whoes which have Ak for the James hitherto Means $2 Shoe fur Boys in which durabi apyearance. ar throughout the Un.« easily with: 26 8bO ¥ G. W. Cook, 1306 Fa B % Yorih 16th street: F ard Bros., 47 Sout 1oth street. In COUNCIL BLUFPS by Sargent & Evans, 412 Broadway. Proprietor Omaha Business College, IN WHICH 18 TAUGHT Book - Keeping, Penmanship, Commercial Law, Shorthand, Telegraphing o :.' : Cor. 16th and Cavital Ave. J. B. HAYNES, —OFFICIAL- — STENOGRAFPHER, 4 Judietal District. BER OF COMMERCE. THE CAPITOL HOTEL LINCOLN. NEB. The best known and most state. Location eentral, app Tieadquariers for commercial a5d public gatherings. BP DREXEL & MAUL, (Successors to Jobn G Undertakers and Embalmers | At the old nd, 1407 Farnam St. Orders by tele- grups solcited and prompuiy aivend “Teleleplione No SteckPlano Remarkable G. Jacobs.) WOODBRIDGE BROS. W Gitvitor: PARTS UNDEVELOPED of e boiy eniarged and sirengiheed. Pull partio WA secacd Liee lmllb\-cfl.hllul T. Are very busy this week unpacking new winter goods, and placing them before their custc- mers, who are confident of getting the best when purchased at THE NEW YORK AND OMAHA. They are having a great run on their NOBBY CHEVIOT SUITS AT $10 to $16.50. ‘These suit:: have no equal either in style or price in this city. You can buy a good WORSTED OVERCOA"' FOR $6.50, or an EXTRA FINE ONE FOR $15 to $25. As to UNDERWEAR, you can get a suit all the way from $1 to $3.50, and higher, including the very best importations. If your boy needs a hat 25¢ will buy one at the NEW YORK AND OMATHA, and 100 other styles ranging in price from 50c up to $5. THe CHICA GO ano : North- Western Railway Short Line. Umaha, Council Bluffs And Chicago. take for Des Motnes, Mariailtown, sion, Thxon. Chicago. Miwsakes o the people of Nebraska, Golo: & Tiah, Tdahd, Nevada, Oregon, W ash. i it offirs supedior advantages e roints of supertority 03 0f 1his road between Omahs e trains of this Jine Section with tiose of 8l Othier eastera Indisapalis, Cncinnatt, nireal, Tor Baifimore. Wash inkton, wud il potits in ™ uu.' sk £0r & ticket vis ““NORTHWESTERN.” ommodation. Al ticket agents E_P. WILSON, B Geni. Pass'r Agent Chicago, Lils. gl W. M. BABOOCK, LR Oity Pass’r. Agent. rasks. or Detroit. Columbus Western Agent Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul R'y. The Best Route from Omaha and Couneil Bluffs to THE EAST | TWO TRAINS DAILY BETWFEN OMAHA AND COUNCIL BLUFFS Chicago, «==AND--« Milwaukee, St. Paul, Minneapolis, Cedar Rapids, Rock Island, Freeport, Rockford, | Clinton, Dubuque, Davenport, | Elgin, Medison, Janesville, | Beloit, ‘Winona, La Crosse, | Anasil other tmportant poiuts Bast, Northeast and Sout Jor throneh tickats cal e, the tieket aqeet st el wrnam street, in Paxton Hotel, or at Ucion Pacife 3 ning Cars in the e Chicazo, Mik 4 every attention is. s ‘emipioyes of the tant General Manager. NTER, Geueral Passenger and AFEAFFORD, Amsistant Genersi Passenger and Ticket Agent VT CLARK General superintendent. DRS. §. & D. DAVIESON, 1707 Olive Street, St. Louis, Mo, Of the Missour! State Museum of Anatomy, S Louis, Mo., University College Hospital, Loms dom, Giesen, Germany acd New York. Having devoted their attention SPECIALLY T0 THE_'I’REATIE]H ()3 Nervous, Chronic and Blood DISEASES. More especially those arising from impru- dence, inite wllso suffering to correspond withe Diseases of infection and cont on 1y and speedily without use of dane 2 Patients Whose cases have been treated or pronounced fail to write us conce \ress on re- Observa Nervous Debility and Physical EThaus. ssay on Mar. important ch n diseases of oductive Organs, t forming _which sbouid be re DRS. 5,80, DAVIESON, 1707 Clive St., St. Leuis, Mo, ROOFING. G.W.ROGERS Composition and Gravel Roofing. Agent for Warren's Natural Asphalt Rocfng, Mecal Brnad 2 nnd ¥ ply Jesdy Roofag. 106 Masoa Nehraska Nat'l Bank DEPCSITORY, OMAXZA, Paid Up Capital, - 525,0000 Surplus, - - - 42800 H. W. Yares, President. LEwIs 5. Reen, Vice-President. A. E.TouzaLas, 24 Vice- dent W. H. 8. HugHxs, Cashier DIRECTORS. RaE, Joux 8. CoLLINg, £S, Lawis 3. KEED, A.E.TovzaLis. w H V. M« w. Y Banking Office— THE IRON BANK. Cor. 13th and Farnam Sts, A General Banking Business Tracsacted i

Other pages from this issue: