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THE OMAHA DAILY BEL: B THE CITY. The internal revenue collections yes- terday amounted to ’ The store of Kélly. Stiger & Co., guffered an invasion of water last night from the floor above. One marriage license was issued yes- terday. The parties were Kristan An- & dersen, aged 22, aund Miss Elsa C. Soven- & sen, aged 22, both of Omaha. About noon yesterday Sandy Wood- bridge, of the World, wus seized with a suddén and severe case of cholera morbus and had to be taken to his © home. This is the first time in fifteen e years and over that Le has been toreed to leave his desk. J. 8. West, of Lincoln, is at the Paxton. H. P. Foster, of Lincoln, is at the Millard. Mr. Walt M. Seely, of Bennett, is in the city. Ike Riegelman, of Des Moines, is in the city. W, W. Nance, of Kearney, is a Millard guest o J. Sutherls . city yesterd; nd, of North Platte, was io the 4 W. H. Platt, of Grand Island, and P. T. Birchard, of Fremont, are guests of the Pax- . ton, Messrs. 1. N. Jones, jr, W. S. Mener, George C. Hutchinson, Charles G. Dwyer and 8. J. Hearn, all of the United States b Army, were among the Paxton's arriv | yesterday. the vicinity of nue are much nd grown m "Phe respectable residents Thirtieth street and Cavitol annoyed by a gang of unruly boy men, who are in the babit of going swimming in a deep pond at this poiut. A Much Needea Improvement. The Paxton flue which for so long a time has caused much complamt by the general dispensation of smoke and soot is to be ex- tended heavenward a distance of twenty-five feet, which will no doubt obviate m the fnconvenicnce herctofore experien Jscaped Jail Birds. Chiet of Police Seavey received a commu- nieation from Superintendent Sampson, of the Colorado state industrial school, yester- day, requesting him to be on the look- out for two runiway boys, Abe Goodwin and F Peter Georgeault. Both are said to be ex- | pert thieves and hardened criminals, and they were headed for Omaha with a party of tramps. Ll A Runaway Grip. The grip on car 57 of the Harney street line caught a strand of the cable yesterday and ran away, carrying a Dodge street train ahead of it, despite the efforts of the ‘rlpmn to get loose. The coach just ahead ept the track until it reached Twelfth street, when it left the track and nearly turned crosswise of the street, and was pushed to "Thirteenth, where the strand became loos- ened and the cars stopped. The speed of the cable was slackened and the break repaired. Public Fountains. The water works company are working away laying their main from Florence to this city. A thirty-six inch main is being put down, and the work is now going on along Twenty-fourth street. The public drinking fountains to be put up by the com- pany will be us ornamental as useful. There are to be five of them e d at convenient and conspicnous points within the city’s cen- ter. They will be built of granite boulders, with an artistically chiselled base, around which cut in the stone will be troughs for snimals. The fountains themselves will be l‘l)%\":;l in dcmgn. and will be completed by — Opens Next Sunday. On next Sunday, the new congregational church on the corner of Davenport and Nine- teenth strect will be open for public worship. T'he seats, carpets and decorations and every- thing will be complete, including the new or- gan which is said to be a very flne instru- ment. The sermon will be preached by Rev. Warren P. Day, of Ottawa, I1l., who will oc- eupy the pulbit during the month of August. * The old choir will be reinforced for the occa- slon. The dedication of the church will nov take place until September 1. Rev. Mr. Sherrill will preach in St. Louis furing the month of A\Igun. \"yulnlnw ()Il Fields. Mr. Henry Fuhrman, of Fremont is in the . city on business connected with the Wyom- wng Central Oil and Pipe Line company, of which he is president. This company was organized last year by a number of enter- prising Fremont capitalists who are taking an active interest in the development of the oil fields of Wyoming. The company have recently completed arrangements for sinking @ well in the Rattle Snake district in con- Junction with the Northwestern Oil com- E { of which Superintendent Fitch, of the lk orn Valley line, is president. The esti- cost of sinking the well is about tnn,mo ‘The machinery and material for do- & this work have been purchased and are now on the way, and it is expected that the well will be sunk to u sutticient dopth for a steady supply of lubricator before the season — The rosy freshness and a velvety soft- ness of the skin is invariably obtained - by flam who use Pozzoni’s Complexion wder ~ The UNION l‘ACll'lC is the only line from the Missouri Riyer running ¢ direct to Ogden, Utah, the Orchard - City of the Wahsatch Mountains, ! e — A DIFFERENCE OF OPINIO! An Export Examiner Criticises Rogis- ter of Doeds Megeath, Mr. J. J. Points, who ¢ of deeds’ tirst quarterly report for 1858, flnvls _ that it was in good order with vouchers for ~ all expenditures, but he raises a question as to the logulity of some of the latter. He says the county commissioners on Janua 1888, fixed the following salavies for u.u ~'a assistants: Deputy, $1 numer- mdexd«'rx,.' geperal index clerk, 5 two comparers, each 3i-v, °7ea boy, ) “In Pebruary the schedulo was chauged " aud only 720 and 60 allowed for the com- parers. Mr. Points found in the register's Freport the following salaries paid in uddition ~ lo those of the assistants allowed by the com- ~ missioners: 8. 8. Auch Moedy . Lincoln Brown. N. B. Wkite..... urch, 1858— N. B. White Lincoln Brown X M ye = bor whilo Mr. W. 12, English: was also acting nd Wood were paid as oftice bo, Browu and Whlh did a variety of clerical 'work, ints advises that those employes re- uln v treatment, as they rendered the tor ‘which l\lllge is wmade. The hnld that the law empowering the commissioners to fix the number of o8 in county ofices does not ngply to his office was created after the law tion was enacted. Attention is called fact that tho mgllwr has outside par- copies of records, and he sub- returns thereof. There is no evi- that the vegister receives auny part of ima paid for such work, but Mr. Points that it should be done in hiis office and e —— raise Hood's Swrsuparilla another whose sou, sorofula, was cured by i 3 M qunm. \f' bl ud 'Y nadielno. ———— UNION Pl&Cl.l‘lO runs two ele- lrdu daily from Kunsus City to 9miles —aud is the short llu. THROWN UPON THE WORLD. A Woman Ruined and Desorted by a Denver Banker, When the Pullman car Buena Vista left Denver on Sunday evening for Omaha, among the passengars was a young woman | perhaps twenty-five years of age and a young man mi 3 h had a tic to Council Bluffs, The young man appeared very solicitous con- cerning the welfarc of his female companion the fact that she nee i st and many were the times he advised her to go to sl At about midnight she ordered the sable attendant to up her, berth and very soon afterward re- tired and was soon in the land of dreams. As soon as convinced that she was aslecp her companion went into the smoking apartments and that was the last seen of him by the colored attendant, The lady slumbered on and not until Waterloo was shed did she leave the berth, Then when dreams were broken by the porter, she, upon hing for her companion, found he was gone. Then was a sensation produced. for the woman bursting into tears, bewailed her lot and announced that she had been de- ceived and deserted. As the train did not stob but for a few moments, she was pre- vailed upon to go across to Council Bluffs, hoping that the young man mentioned had merely dropped off to get a cigar and would join her on the other side of ihe river. But 10, he did not, and the woman mingled with the erowd and has not since been heard of. ‘There is a history to this case, vague as the above may scem, and a conversation with the porterof the Pullman yester shed light on the mystery. When the train left Dénver :15 Satur- night, two men, one an elderly man, per- s [ifty years of u"n and known to be a minent banker of Denver, accompanied by the woman mentioned boarded the train. 3 ery anxious regarding s welfare and impressed upon the 1 the importance of “taking good e of Jenny.” As the train was about to start the old man left and the youth and his compafion came on. At Schuyler the flyer and the train which leaves here at 9 a. m. for Denver pass, and at this point the young man mentioned, whose given name 18 Clar- euce, left and is supposed to have gone K to Denver. The porter relates that the ien she found she had been de- serted confided her story to an old lady on the train, the substance of which1s as fol- lows: Her name Jennie Wood, and for some time she has been in the employ of a wealthy banker and stock man in Denv domes- tic. In an evil hour she fell a victim to the temptations of her employer, and some months ago discovered herself to be in a del- icate condition, She atonce informed him of this fact, buthe only laughed at the idea and said she must be mistaken, but when she be- gan to show undisputable evidence of her misfortune the old man, who, by the way, hasa wifeof his own, realized that some- thing must be done and concluded to send her to Omaha, ostensibly to visit her sister, until her child was born. He accordingly his bookkeeper, a young man whose ne the girl does not know, as a com- panion with the result us above stated. The woman rode to Council Bluffs on bridge ticket 57.285, but where she went the porter did not know. She asserted that she had not a friend in this section and had only 90 cents in currency with her. When sho left Denver she expected to be placed in the hands of a competent nurse and a physician until her trouble was over. Where the un- forcunate woman is at present is unknown, but it is suppos is drifting around the city across the rive ———— The UNION. PACIFIC is the only roand running through Pullman Cars between the Missouri River and Port- laud, Oregon. — —— ALONE AND FORGOTTEN. Death En's the Career of an Oid Omaha Character. Thomas McCormick, a well-known charac- ter in Omaha in 1ts poneer days, died Tues- day at the poor farm at the ripe age of ninety years, A quarter ofa century ago McCor- mick was the center of attraction at all so- cial gatherings in Omaha, and was distin- guished on account of his genius for enter- taining. He had an inexhaustible fund of stories, and 18 said to have known the Ara- bian Nights by heart. His trade was that of u stone mason, and at one time ho had ac- cumulated quite a competence, but through some reverses this was swept away, and in his old age he was left destitute. None of those who had enjoyed his hospitality offered @ helping hand, and he went to the poor house, and dropped into oblivion. For about twenty years he has lived on the county. The last few years he has been blind, and as helpless almost as an infant, Wm. Black, Abingdon, Towa, was cured of cancer of the eye by Dr.Jones’ Red Clover Tonie, which cures all blood disorders and discases of the stomach, liver and kidneys. The best tonic and appetizer known. 50 cents. Goodman Drug el L Take the UNION PACIFIC OREGON SHORT LINE ingoing to Alaska. e —at— THE REALTY MARKET. Instruments P on Record Dure ing Yesterday. O L Stafford and wife to CH Bro wn, lot B, blk 10, Omaha, q ¢ d. b A Roads and wite' to 0 H umwn. ot %, bik 9), lot & blk &1, O cd. RS Iheriin to A © Busch, 15t 1, Vik 17, & Smitn's add,w d Tho Patrick Land comp 1 % blk and its to Portland, ce g§E8 e EE8E8EE 31 Biack and with to B Hiack’s sub, B To M e and wito to H McKunley 60, “iot'd, '8 BUD, W d...oo.voe ne and wif 10 8" Damall; “blk 1, Orchard Hill, wd. Jus H Btowart and wite to i 8, blk 5, Thoruburg Yluu atterson ind wite to t 4 " lots 18, Swunders & Himebaugh' M Donnelly to J G Taylor, lot Boggs & Hill's 15t add, w d.. Otto Lobeck to Wi J Mitton, 10t 10, biicy Lincoln place, w d utphen to D W ( v « Suphen ‘et al, 5 5, e, Will 01 Curiis, lot B, burg place, w d.. Land Coto A Bramson et al, +h Qmaba, wd R Levy to A liromson, *#% bl 66, South Oniana, q ¢4 A Bromson to R 1,(;\3, ik 65, South Omah, q E E French and wife J 0 Haines, lots 7 and §, bk 3, Central park, w Morse & Bruner to A Rice. lots 9, 14, 15, 16 and 17, bik uner's add, wd. . L P Pruyn and'witeto 1t of 5 60 ftlots 0and 11, ik 10, l-mrhk it 1ot 5, o 2nd add, W d 2400 L'P Pruyi and wife to A "1 'Savage, s 30'f 9€1 00 £t lots 10 and 11, DIk 10, Patrick's #a wdd, w . 2,400 1 Hiloks Mud wita 1A & S, oty 1, 2 and 3, blk 2, Cottage place, w d. 1,300 R Hetelnger to P Shepherd, 10t 7 W Union square..... 3 1 Ao ¥ 11, blk |, Horbaeh's % Barkér and wife to D 15 and 16, Vates & Reed's phagans add, w d. : ibson to C C Plrmnle, iots’ 1 2 4, 6 0, ..K 9, 10, llnll«ll bIK 2, and’ lots 21, 2 and 23, blk 2, and'lots 6, 7, 8, 10, blk 4, W b-d & l‘u\lml'lel ada, G a-n wd. Twenty-six transfers Building Permits. The following permits to build were is- sued yesterday : . McIntosh, two-story frame resi- 'dence, Tenth and Dancroft 2,50 M eldereveiser, cottage, 1816 Bouth ‘Thirteenth. .. 900 Mrs. Anua Jones, haprovements, Twen- tieth and California.. ... . 8,500 Charles Tolomal, store, ‘Tenth and ‘Marcy 420 H. T.Clarke, burn, alley near Cass, be- tween Twenty-third and Twenty.titin, 500 dlton, twelve cot hlnhul lml Pinckney 6,000 Mg, M. Murray, kuuun; suu. near Fort Om Beven perinits ager egating. ... .. —— For all evils arising lrom disordered stomach, ipactive liver or coustipated habit, Tuuuu'r S SELTZER APERIENT isadelightful and insisted upon the porter spending most | of his time in making matters comfortable | for her. Repeatedly did he urge upon her and Rob- ckers, been called to A Trio of Sisters “Bleedin bing Simpletons and The attention of Tik Be atrio of blackmailers and lewd women ing their nefarious game in our city. Their names are Minnie, Frankie and Nellie Stark, three sisters formerly of C later of Kausas City and Des Moines, at all of which places they have gained very unsavory reputations. In Omaha, they were first employed at the Arcade and later at the sdar Rapids and Canfield and Cozzens hotels as waiters, and were discharged from both places for *‘work- ing' the guests and on account of their lewd and dishonest conduct. They can be seen on the streets at almost any hour of the night, and the Casino, Motz garden and other drinking places are their favorite resorts, Thoy dress elegantly with the money they extort from their victims and are | always busy plying their despicable busi- ness. Their plan is to entice a person into one of the many wine-rooms of the city and then either rob him or, under threats of exposure and blackmail, compel him to give them “hush mone Three more soulless sirens were never known even in the lowest dens in the city, and they have numbered among their vietims some of the_leading citizens of Omaha. They are up toall manner of tricks, one of which is to take the change brought back to their victim, after he has paid for drinks, and then refuse to give it up. Thus at the Vienna restaurant lately Frankie and Minnie had on_their string two prominent merchants of Omaha who would blush to see their names mentioned here. Drinks amount- ing to a dollar were ordered, and one of the merchants tendered a §10 bill in_payment to the waiter. The §0 in change brought back was gobbled up by one of the girls, and, strange to sy, the other merchant was served ina similar’ mauuer. Se repetitions of this on other persons are know .»r One evening a couple of young fellows, ren ser \m| this trick, insisted on turned, when the girls snceringly defied then to get'it. They took the detinnce, seized the shameless women, searched their pockets, and secured it. At present none of the three girls are doing any legitimate work, but all are living in elegant style off the victims they decoy. Only a few months ago Nellie got about 83,000 out of a promi- nent sporting man of Des Moines on the claim that he was the father of her illegiti- mate child. Four weeks ago she was dis- charged from the Cozzens hotel for a most bold and indecent fraud practiced on a re- spectable gentleman. This was the last of a series of escapades that had come to the ears of the proprietor and he bade her quit the house. A description of some of their modes are too vile for publication. One method is to make a fictitious date for a liaison with & vie- tim and get expensive presents and woney from him and then fail to appear at the ap- pointed time, Av elderly gentleman pretty well known in this city has been lately terribly victimized by Frankie, the most attractive appearing of the trio. The old man fell into the toils of the siren and she promised to live with him as though she were his wife after July 1. On the strength of this promise she induced him to buy for her a couple of fine silk dresses, an elegant hat, a pair of diamond earrings, a gold wateh, a gold-headed silik umbrella, and other costly articles that she now proudly sports. When July 1 came she told the old man that their plan would have to be aband- | thing of his whe oned as her sister Minnie had somehow -dis. covered it. and was _about to Write home to her parents about it. To have her hush the matter up he would have to buy Minnie some - presents also, and the poor old fool duplicated for Minnie the expensive gifts he had gives to Frankie He also rented and paid for the apartment: they now oceupy and paid for each a month's board in advance. To use Frankie's own ex- prossion,—‘the old fellow s the rankest sucker yet," A revolting category of other acts of de- pravity and theft are known and could be mentioned concerning them, but enough is given to warn the public against them. They have been very forfumate in escaping arrest, but the reason for this is that their victims are of a highly respectable class who would much prefer being robbed than to have their names coupled with such low characters in the police court, Eureka, The motto of California means, I have found it. Only in that land of sunshine, where the orange, lemon, olive; fig and grape bloom and ripen, and attain their highest perfection in mid-winter, are the herbs and gum found, that are used in that pleasant remedy for all throat and lung troubles. SANTA ABIE the ruler of coughs, asthma and consumption. The Good- man Drug Co. has been appointed agent for this valuable California remedy,and sells it under a guarantee at $1 a bottle. Three (m ! Try CALIFORNIA CAT-R-CURE, the only guaranteed cure for catarrh. 81, by muil $1.10 —————— CARELESS DRIVING, A General Smash-Up of Vehic North Sixteenth, Tuesday night about half-past $ a team of horses attached to a carringe containing a lady and_ gentleman, ran into a small cart, which also contained a lady and gentleman, near Dr. Chambers' residence, Sixteenth street, completely wreeking the latter. While au effort was being made to provide for the safety of the occupants and to secure control of the animals another buggy, from where no one knows, dashed into the wreck and Dbefore the driver could realize where he was, a fourth Lovse came running into the pile of debris and four wrecked buggies marked the scene. Peter Madsen was seriously in- jured and Mrs. Clem Hackney and her son were thrown to the pavement. Later in the evening two teams were rac- ing up the street near Grace, when one of them ran into a horse belonging to Thomas Gray, who lives at Twenty-ninth and Cum- ing. 'The pole of the wagon struck the he in the neck, penetrating the jugular. Ti driver at once started for Dr. Chamber residence, but before he reactied there the horse dropped down and died. g e The UNION PACIFIC is the popular route tothe Yellowstone National Park. On e Left in the Lurch. F. H. Glover, proprictor of a small planing mill on Saunders street, near Cuming, has decamped for parts unknown. His creditors, who are the losers to the amount of §100 or £100, are particularly anxious to learn some- cabouts. BEST FOR chMPLExlon WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1, 1888 SIX MONTHS Accumulations of odds and ends in our men’s and boys’ suits stock,such as one or two suits of a kind, must be closed out during the next few days as our incommg fall goods are already crowding us for room. Among the men’s suits are a few extra fine dress and business suits madeof choicest fancy worsteds, and gotten up in a No | style. No cus= tom garment can beat them, They are suits for which merchant tailors would charge from $40 to $50, and fine ready-made houses are asking $35 for them today. To make a quick and clean sweep with them, we have marked them at less than the material in them is worth. Of the $4.75 all wool cheviot suits advertised last week, there are only a few left. We never had such a run on a suit as we had on this, and at this time of the year, when other stores have nothing to do. It is a better looking and better wearing suit than other houses are offering for dou= ble the money. Enormous reductions form former prices on all Boys’ and Children’s have left. We do not intend to carry one over if we can help it. An endless accumulation of odd Knee Pants which will be gold at less than half their value. Wind up clearing sale of all our Summer Furnishing Goods, such as Underwear, Hosiery, Flannel Shirts, ete. Closing out of all our Summer Scarfs at ridiculously low prices. A lot of splendid Silk Tecks at 15¢; usaally sold at 50c. Summer Suits we Another lot of extra fine Four in hand and Tecks at 45¢; such as are generally sold at 73e and $1.00, This is the handsomest and most elegant Scarf for Sum- mer wear, and the regular price for these Scarfs is everywhere $1.00; our price this week is 85c. One price only and plain figures. Nebraska Clothing Gompany Cor. A lot of very fine Silk Grenadine Tecks at 35c. 14th and Douglas Streets, Omaha. [Burfingfon Route CoRQAR. The Burlington takes the lead. It was n advance of all lines in developing Nebraska. It was in advance of all lines in establishing dining-car service between Missouri river points and Chicago. It was in advance of all lines in giving the people of Omaha and the West a fast mail service. It was in advance of all lines in running its trains from the East to Omaha propsr. It was in advance of all lines in reducing the time of . passenger trains between Omaha and Chicago. It was in advance, and is the only line by which you can feave Omaha in the morning and arrive in Denver the evening of the same day. It has been progressive in the past. WARM WAVES Are rolling in. You can’t escape them ; but you can escape the sleep- less nights, loss of appetite, and languid fecling that result from drain- ing the nervous force by muscular or mer's torrid days. The Compound, that great strengthen the nervous against the attacks of preparation is a medi scientific combination of benefit to body and brain. and has brought new life weakened nerves were thel especially valuable at this go liable to sunstroke, a fatal. Paine’s Celery health, almost entirely re disease, mental exertion in sum- use of Paine’s Celery nervetonic, will at once system, and_fortify it summer debility. This cine—not a drink. Ttisa the best tonics, giving lasting It cures all nervous discases, and health to thousands whose cause of their many ills. It is season, when feeble persons are disease which is nearly always 4 Compound, by restoring perfect = moves the liability to this dread If you feel the effects of summer’s heat, you can't afford to delay another day before gaining the vitality only obtained by the use of this great medicine. Sold by Druggists. $1.00. Six for $5.00. Send for eight-page paper, with many testimonials, WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO. GO0L te BLOOD EEGULITE BY [USING TARRANT'S SELTZER APERI'NT BURLINGTON, VT. HE BOWELS BY TAKING TARRANT'S SELTZER APERI'NT ARKE EBIE nall PAINESVILLE, omis, Location pleasantand ) g DML m.m,.mm,g.' machegs. SEMINARY, thinl. Course -dynlo-dm and R T droms 0. M AY R L, s Morgan Park, ik onTT Madison Berect, » Chicaiio, L. FREEHOLD INSTITUTE | & FREEHOLD, NEW JERSEY. 4ith year, For catalogues send to REV. A, G, CH AMBERS, A, M., Principal, Morgan Park Military Academy The Best Boy's Iloln\hm 8chool in the West, Sixtoenth year be . Lith, logue to (A MOKGAN PARK, LA)OK Co., TLL, Ilatfll Stuart Insmlm Will commenco Its 21st Bend for cata- BPRINGFIEL Fou Y ul N mber fth, SenD for cata- ¥ M D.M.A. Principal logue. Jh() M. TILDE! PARIS UNIVERSAL EXPOSIT ll]ll Of 1889, | Office of the U. 8. Commis BET. llK VTALCOTT, Supt., | HII.ITIIIY AGADEm}. LLOCATION -2 miles north of Ohi FREVTIN R orpa of Maperienced lu- e Coumes of Study, r Instruction, iy SOMERVILLE SCHOOL ForYogm; dies. Three courses of study. I'homuth!n in eve- department, Buildings elegantly furnished. eated with steam, lighted with gas, water from St. Clair xiver. Nuperior wivaitiges in musicanid art. Addresy tor civealar, e BN ER L SO0, Ko Gratr, Mich, mpt South mstown, B«rksntre eounty, Mass. A privite school for boyt., Prepare for sollege, seientific sehool or business. Forty-sev. enth year begins Thursduy, sqm-un.-. 13, For catalogue address GEO.'F, MILL Principil PENNYROYAL WAFERS successfully used monthly by over 10, Kt <. dies. Ansq!u. Effectualand Pleasant irrorations wito eaire 19 ¢ ot MM: um':‘mi\dam’d Jovi named Exposiion are , VRS RS ¥ puy Eoiced Cuskical Ga briort, b Y Yaral hed he under bove bs. - For sale and lm mail by Goodmn v Drug Co., Omahda, Ne It will lead in the future. Travel and ship via the Burlington. Ticket Office, 1223 Farnam Street. Depot on Tenth Street. Telephone 250, Burlington urhng“\ Route | J TBEQAR Route C.B.&Q.AR. | —THE— WAX MEYER & BRD, vour || MAG) SllOHT LI Jowelers and Vs Dealrs, General Agents for STEINWAY, KNABE, CHICKERING and other first-class Planos. Lok at FOLLOWING BARGAINS FOR ! Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Pau! R'y, The Best Route from Omaha and Counell + Bluffs to THE EAST CHOICE || | 7wo TrAINS DALY BETWEEN OMALA AND lr'rzr'::;':'u. ,}l""‘l',"f""'. COUNCIL BLUFES cost nm. c Chicago, ~AND— Milwaukee, $10.00 | St. Paul, Minneapolis, Cedar Rapids, 15.00 AVSL$L2 and 8150 Rock Island, Freeport, Rockford, 10.00 straw Hats, 50¢ Clinton, Dubuque, Davenport, ps Al % and # Light | | Elgin, Madison, Janesville, 9 Su@ Hats, now Beloit, Winona, La Crosse, i Uit 860 2 And all other Important points East, Northeast ang | 1 IArshall & WEBSCE LRIEL 2000 10.00 fontheast, 1 Hallet & Davis Upright For through tickets call aa the ticket agent at 1501 a8 g0od a8 Now, cost S0, Farnaw sireet, in Barker Biock, or st Uslon Pucite 495, o w0 15.00 o ilaan a0 e o0 P can o i TV e nd every atentl ‘“ Imnlnuul’ 6 Octave Organ, us employes cf cost new 76, for only #5.. 10.00 5.00 1 Shoninger OFgan, used oue ns, car, cost new 8125, for 8. 10.00 5.00 cneral Passenger and lln\‘nil .& ‘:hnulln 01[(»1‘" 0 @ ban) 08t new l‘ ), it General Passenger | 008 oo 10.00 600 HEAFFORD, Ass. iy o dicked Ao S AL o) s th 0l 0 l 4 B el Sunartatendent Bring this ad, with you to avold mistukes MAX MEYER & BRO., Covuer Sixteanth and Farnam Ste. v ———— Ncbrdska Natmnal Bank U. §, DEPOSITORY, OIAEA NEB, Paid Up Capital. . 50,000 FXNE CUT AND PLUS neomwnblv the Best. 2i 839,630 . Surplus 50,000 % Y Tansill's Punch Cigars | v v, Yares, presiaent, ‘were shipped during the A. L5, PouzALix, 20d Vice President, two years, without s W, HUGHES, Cashler, 1 Gur'employ DIBECT! W,V E, .]mlN 8. CorriNg, H. W. YATES 15 8, HEkb, TOUZALIN. LOWEST RATES! AND BEST TERMS( Hesponsible ropresentatives wanted. Call o BURNHAM, ’I‘RLVL’I'!' & MA'l'l E. Banking Office- THE IRON BANK, Carner 12th and Farnam Sts. A General Banking Business Transacted,