Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 6, 1888, Page 8

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THE CITY. Per<onal Paragraphs. Henry Herole, of Plattsmouth, was in the ity yesterday. . 'A. Williams and family, of Sidney, are Paxton guests, ¥. M. Mills, of Des Moines, ex-state prin- ter of lowa, is at the Millard. of Holdrege, is a Millard rge W, Wainwright, of Blair, is in the d W. Clarke and H Creston, were i Clarke, ir., of §. Auch Moedy smiles uncon- y over the action of the county com- He has his pay and the loss falls on Reg Megeath, Civilization Not Without Its Price. Several times of late the reporters hav been asked to omit notice of certain mar- riage licenses, The reuson assigned in each case was that the groom-to-be was a poor men who hed to be married so quiet to evade the toll of a charavari and the tax of anxious-to-be-treated frionds, Into the Ditch, Ahorse car last uight gotdoff its track on South ‘Tenth, near the point of crossing the Union Pacific track, and ran into an excavation made for the extension of The car was not muoh dam- n injured, but it was a e job putting the car again on right of way. The UNTON l AC ll J Trans-Continental Line. e was the first THE CORONLR'S FINDINGS. The D ath o Olar Preis Adjudged to Be Purely Accidenta Olaf Prei tally shot by his brother Saturday, died about 9 o'clock yesterday morning. A coroner’s inqu was held and the jury rendered a verdict of accidental death. They exoncrated the de- ceased’s brother from blame. In the case of Christopher Hensen the § rendered a verdict of suicide. The mother has telegraphed for the body and it will ba sent to Mec! hanicsburg, O. Do not be induced to take some other when you eall for Hood's Jo sure to get Hood’s, TN TS, fit Last Night at AMUSE Terr Molchin's Denot Metz Garden, The pretty play of ‘*‘Anna-T, o was presented at Metz Garden last evening and was a bencefit to Hubert Mo'chin who played the leading male part, Leopold. It is an his- v and sho at famous gen- eral and prince won his peasant wife, The all uniformly good. Herr Molch- ts were up to their usual standa in Dorofska, as Auna Liese of vhile the part cellently given for Traniain Dovotaitn, Soda Springs, Tdaho, excelling all the Spas of the world, can be reached only by tha UNION PACIFIC. HORSE VERSUS Cillhli. A Runaway T Dash Into a Car— One Horse Kil At half past ten last night a runaway team hitched to & hack dashed down South Tenth street. A cable car was running north and the two forces collided at Harnoy street. One of the Lorses was discmboweled and its intestines strewn upon the strect. OM- Bloom put the animal out of with & number of shots from his The other horse was siightly scratched, but the carriage was demolished. “The headlight and front end of the cable cur were smashed, but no one was hurt. The hack had neither driver nor passenger. It was recognized as belonging to Atwood & Cuming street, Who were noti- fled by telephone. A GIRL ls Kll)hAl’Pl‘B. Dr. J. A. Vanden Burg's Daughter Carried off by Unknown Parties. While Dr. J. A. Vauden Burg, now of Friend, was visiting with his father at 1499 Davenport street last Saturday, and making preparations to return to Omaha to practice bis profession, he received a telegram telling of the Kkidnapping of his ninc-year-old daughter at Friend. It appears that a tleman and lady had alighted frow a wi bound train in the afternoon at the village, and after procuring a livery team and d they drove by Dr. Vanden Burg's residence 10 reconnoiter, The child was playing alone in the yard and she was scized and forcibly carried off, Toe girl is a' child by his_ first wife from whom he was divorced eight years ago, and it is thought the kidnappers are no ome else than this woman and her stepson. She hes re-married and is now living near Plattsmouth, and it is thought she now has the child with her. After se- curing the girl the kidnappers were quickly itriven w(umm'\nn the Fremont, Elkhorn & Missouri Vulley roilroad acd a circuitous route taken to Plattsmouth. This was learned from the driver of the team. The girl is a great pet of the doctor's and ho is greatly concerned over her disappearance, 1e.will do all in his power to find her und - baye Ler returned. ——— A luxurious draught Seltzer Aperient arjsing from indi diinking. of Tarrant’s moves all ill effects etions in eating or e A NEW REGULATION, Poligemen Must Not Leave Their Eeats Without Pevmission, A now order was issued to the policemen _ Baturday night directing them uot to loave their beats without going to & patrol box, tel phoning to the central station and getting permission. Some of the patrolmes ave not slow to criticise the new regulation, “Suppose,” says oue of them, I that o wan is being murdered over on that street. Ican't go over there without per- mission. I may be some distance from a patrol box and a delay of five or ten minutes way be fatal, Sup am notified of a burgler at work If he f time am told 10 o scot free befor headquart 1f I violate orders 1 to » fine. It's a cuse of being between the devil and the deep sea. ‘There's the ease of ofticers Cullen und Brady the othei doy. A man hed been sandbageed and robbed the njght before, and when they got wind of @ gang of suspicious fellows oun the street next to their beat they went over to Investigate the crowds. As the suspocts fled one of them threw away the stolen watch aod another fired at the policoman, After a long chase in an intensely hot day two of the men were captured, but both of the officers were overcome with the heat, A sergea l. happened to go over their beats while th were absent and reported them. Chief So 4(\) let the ofticers off, but if they hadu't cap- tured their prisonors thoy would probably have been fined, although they were ranning the chance of being shot_and of sunstroke in tryiug to proteet t ’}m public. We can't af- ford to be flued. and this w rule will put uUs iuto & peculiar fix sometimes,” Fres Excursion Sleeping Cars, via UNION PACITIC RAILWAY between Council Blufls und Los Augeles are run aily. e —————— MORE ILLICIY LOVE, Y The Missing Frank Paul Robs ‘A other Manu of His Spouse. The sudden decampment of Frank Paul from the city and desertion of his family _brings to light a romsntic story of love and % w isa uqn- of astonishment to his Two years nn Fraok, tull of ambitious ufiummmun, left the fatherland to | to | with THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: MONDAY. Y N e AUGUST 6. 1888, geck his fortune in America. On the same steamer on which he sailed was a German couple named Mr, and Mrs. Hinesman, who als) were bound for the prosperous land of freedom. Mrs. Hinesman was a charming and petite young woman, and Frank, who bec infatuated -~ with her, mxumw-d pass considerable of his time her while on shipboard, , 100, very indiscreetly allowed herself fall in love with the handsome young Prussian. At Castle Garden they parted, Mrs. Hinesman ling with her husband in New York state while Frank Paul came west, finally establishing himself in business in Omuha, Fortune smiled on him and he yearned for a female partner to share his prosperity The daring scheme of writing to Mrs, Hinesman and asking her to desert her hus- band and fly to him suggested iself in b lnlml To think was to act and he wus thrilled a week later receiving a letter from her approving the scheme and telling him she would come as soon as she got sufficient money to buy a ticket to Omaha. The next mail east carried u moncy order suffic re and other expenses to tl Prank’s friends that the two had been married « time, she meanwhile living in the east while he came west to make a home for her. Mrs. Hinesman had covered her tracks 80 effectually that her husband never learne to what place she hud flown. She and Mr. Paul been living together ever sin Thirteenth strect, part of time 1 Leavenworth, and nbout a ir 420 B ¢ rmm was born to the guilty pair. and has becom mistreating neglecting to although he' was nin, now with him, ng a just retribu- Paul has left her in al- nmstances. repentant of her sinful declures that she is suffe tion for her cou most destitute Wm. Black, Abmugdon, Towa, cured of cancer of the eye by D Red Clover Tonie, which cures al disorders and diseuses of the stomach, liver and kidney J he best tonie and appetizer known. 50 cents. Goodman was { Drug Co. ——— An Insect ny. < )N, Neb., July 81.—To the Editor of T B Please answer the follow- ing: My Transcendent and Hyslop apple 5 wore stung by some kind of insect in May for the first time. I cut the dead branches and burned them, but of these branches is becom- ing alarming sy oave now killing the more valuable kinds of apple trees and the stinging still contin ‘What is the remedy? At first the work was on last yeur’s growth, but now it is most anywhere on the trees. I have some trées [am afraid I must cut down. Any information through your most valuable puper will be thankfully received. Yours, B. GR \Y. Tn order to secure the above, the writer should hav more explicit in vegard to the insect which has caused the devastation. The damage may have been eaused by half lilferent species of pest, and ¢ o general suggestion s to the remedy. One of the best remedies for destroying the in- sect enemies of the apple tree is to shower the tree with a solution of paris green or london purple, mixing at the rato of a tablespoonful to a gallon of wite a force hump with o spray nozzle. The pumus for this pnrpose are so ch now that mer should have one. They ave ¢ ant not ouly for this use, but for many other purposes about the farm. y insect pests can be de- stroyed or driven away by the shower- ing process, even when only cold water is used. Botter still, when it is de- sired, to mix poison, kerosene or other substance which is offensive to the in- sects with the water. The so-called r als of the UNION PACIFIiCare Omaha, Council Bluffs, St. Joseph, Leaven- worth and Kansas City. S L A Purty Way to Taik toa Pore Lono Widder. A weather-beaten woman of melan- choly and discouraged mien sat in front of a drummer on a railroad train. She was clad in rusty mourning and her ap- pearance indicated that her loss was recent. When near to Chicago sho turned to the drummer and asked: “What place are we coming to next?” “Chicago, madam,” ; "I‘,ummu see; that's in Illivoy, ain’t 1348 *Yes—certainly.” “1'd ort to know, but T'd forgot I ben in Illinoy. 1 buried my muL husband re bnut t\u,nt', years ago.” ndeed *‘Yes; uu(l from TIllinoy T went to Toway. I buried my second man out in Toway, and I ain't been there senco, That was eighteen years ago. down to South Carliny from ln “Oh, did you? “You he Ever called Black Snake For s Hen Dodson lays there,’ *Who wus Mr. Dodson?” M, man; and a right smart He had a cousin named l";)'ul run across Hi?” feller he was. Hi Duggett, think no “You'd know if you had. il: Him and me v ay, and he’s buried from Atlanty.” *Oh, indeed! Ev'rybody married in nine miles and do you live in no! Ain’t set foot there for dozen year: I went from up to Minusoty, and I met n up there, ‘Tom Hixon? .\ml me lived most a year then a blamed old \\lul ) had kicked Tom so fu cold day under Paul, and sold off sas, near Atehison soction of lund man’s, named Dill.’ *And \uu - ‘‘Yes, married Dill, and he took n]n'l».u\rl fever "fore three months and left me a widow “fore the next year wus out. l tell you, I've had mighty bad 1uvl\ 1 should think so.” “That's what I have, arber. After me ar vied out in Culiforny we got along splen- did and making money fast, when all of a sudden Ben goes head first down a 900-foot shaft, and of course I wasa Bi006s 'tore L pore man ever struck bottom.” mule w the snow, up near St. and wont out to Kan- wd tuk up a quarter 'iuiu‘ a real smart There was Ben him was mar- n you left California.” “¥oo: T staid there eight or nine months, and then Bob, he wanted to— “Bob who?? **Oh, Bob White. He was Ben’s pard- ner; and he never give me no peace till I married him. He's buried in the Black Hills, +*Great Caosar!” eried the drummer; “do you make a business of going round the Country hur\ ing hunbuufis‘{" The “widder” put her haudkerchief to hior eyes and suid in keon rebuke: “Thaf’s a purty way to talk to & pore lene widder that got her husband’s Jmu in the baggage car ahead kin’ him out to Dakoty to lay him lldu of hisother kin folks. ~You ort to be ’shamed to ba s0 onfeelin’,”—Detroit Advertiser, v —— Smoke Seidenberg’s Figaro and the best 5-ceut omlu' in the world, Meéver & Co., wholesale depot. tally that I buried him ono | A LIGHTNING JERKER'S STORY An Old Operator Exchanges Remi- niscences With the “Gang.” HOW DOODY BLUFFED THE ROAD. ‘Busted and a Long Way From Home,” He Works a Clever Scheme for a Ride. Jim Doody's Bluff, New York Times: The big operating room in the We n Union telegraph building was almost quiet. It is never entirely still from year's end to year's end, but sometimes, as the gray streaks of dawn steal up over the harbor, across the roofs of less lofty buildings and into the top windows of the telegraph com- pany's great pile, making the gas jets und incandescent lnmps appear as if at- tacked with jaundice, theve is o lull in ise caused by the ; of the s of sounder At such an hour, be, the night force of operators has succeeded in cleaving away the hundreds of thousands of words of news- paper dispatches, the papers having by that time gone to pr thousands of ‘‘red” or half! night dispatches have been elicked away to their destinations. Here and there a tived operator, who has “cleared” his wive mna een with his arms on his table and his head bowed upon them, while his deep breathing indicates that he is resting in sleep. In other parts of the spacious room little groups of operators whose wir clear, gather together to talk * or to ex iniscent talc sonul experiences, of adventure, ance. or misfortune, all of to most oper and rom- which come tors at some time or other. The voices of the talkers are nev heard heyond their own civcle, for in o lull there are always a suflicient numt rmatures in motion to drown tional tone. s almost quict when o agoan ex-operator walked ome old aequaints Notwithstanding that a dozen ) nce he had been he the countrv. In the » encountered were *Les™ ew Orleans, *Jud” Thomp- Whalen of Phila- s of Bradley ol son of Omaha delphia : Morvrison of Si Lake City. operator, like the rest of the group had Leen a “traveler,” and the four old-time whom he had met in widely separated offices of the company, jumped up to greet him. The grectings over. the party of course be- gan exchanging reminiscences. “Do you remember, old man,” said one, ‘the time when old Jim Doody traveled first from Omaha to New Yorik on a dollar The older men had heard the story, but the younger ones who were listening had not, but want to, 50 the speaker continued: $ meansof the ‘lost hat’ tr which Jim invented for the oce: . Jim and a lot of us were working for the Atlant > company in Omaha in solidation of the nion and Atlantic & Pa companies was effceted. As a means of economy the Western Union company ran the Atlantic ¢ s into its own oftice and di all of the Atlanue & Pacific operators. We were making hig salaries then, but we lived well,/and when the discharge came some of us were badly left out in the cold. We were half way between the Atlantic oce 1 and the Pacific coast, and we found out then what it meant to be ‘busted and a long way from home.” After a week or so we 1 to raise money enough to carry u large telegraph offices in other but Jim got discharged, a trifle unwisely, and got Drok before he could get outof town. He awoke one morning with just $1in his pocket. His relatives lived in New York, and how to et _there was a ques— tion that severely agitated Jim’s mind. Finally he evolved a eme, desperate but clever. He was well dressed and looked as neatand gentlemanly as could be. Going into the ticket office he asked for a ticket to New York. The clerk took one out, stamped it and handed it over. Jim looked at it a mo- ment, then suddenly remembered an engagement to be kept before leaving town, and rushed out of the office. “In this way he found out whata New York ticket looked like. Next, he secured an old_calendaw, printed on paper somewhat resembling a ong-distance sectional railway ticket, and from this he cut a strip of proper width. This strip he folded in such u way as to represent the various coupons, and_with this absurd counter. feit of ticket he proposed to reach New York. It cost him 50 cents to cross the United States transfer bridge between Omaha and Council Bluffs, so his capi- tal was just that much less. Jim reached Council Bluffs just before dark with his satehel in hand and waited for the night exp easty . It was id hefore the start was made the night beca w darly, While the train was waiting at the staiion Jim boarded the last of the | conches, and prepared for his ‘grs bluff.” Putting his silk hat in a rac k, ho took a_soft traveling hat from his sutchel. In the next seat were an old goentleman and his wife. With this couple Jim entered into conversation, and soon made himself very agrecable. He casually mentioned that he was going to New York, and made a great display of putting his ‘ticket’ in the band of his hat, remarking at the same time that long-dista > tick were ter- bulky aftai n he talked with r people in the taking partic- e that everybody should observe \hn lu ot in his hat-band. When the train started Jim opened the car win- dow and prepared his trap. He as- sumed sleepiness, rested his arm on the window sill, laid his head on his arm in such a way that he could either hold his hat on or let it fall off, and awaited developments. “The train was running ata high rote of speed when the conductor came through., By that time Jim was fast asieep, ‘Tickets,’ calied the conductor, but Jim did not hear, and the official could not see the bogus ticket, for Jim had turned his hat around so that it was on the other side of it. Then the conductor gave the sleeper & shake, but it failed to arouse him. ~Another shake followed, and still another, when at iast the conductor lost patience, and while he exclaimed ‘Here, wake up there,’ gave Jim a rougher shake than those preceding. Now was the critical ~moment. Jim jumped up, roised his left arm as he d| s0, which caused his hat fail out of the window. Half nleeully be began fumbling in his pocket for a ticket, when the old lady in the next seat volunteered the information that Jim had put his ticket in his veling hat. Jim locked around for his hat,and now the kind old gentleman came to the rescue by saying that he had seen the hat fall ‘out” of the window. Jim then took a turn at the conductor, ‘Con- found it,” he ucln\med, ‘my ticket for New York was in you hadn’t it acted > again tried to shake the dife out of me my hat wouldn't have shaken off. T'll report, you for this whew we get to Chicago. “The loud talking hpd attracted the attention of other passengers, several of whom gatheréd around and volun- teered the information that they had seen Jim’s ticket, The conductor went on through the train and reflected that prtiaps b had been a litile rough, A ittle later he came back and sat down in the seat with Jim. Jim told a straight story, and the conductor finally acknowledged his error, apologized for it, begged Jim_ tusay nothing about it, and when they got to Chicago took Jim out for dinner, gave him a pint flask of vhisky, a new traveling hat, a pass to New York, and an_introduction to the Pullman car conductor, with all of which and some sandwiches Jim con- tinued his journey to New York in style. He arrived in the eity with 17 cents.” Even the old-tim at the recollection of Doody and then the inevitable *That l'clmmh me” came from another of the par “You remember the crowd we had in Omaha in the old times when we used to ‘relay’ all the overland stufl there? No? Well, it wue the daisiest set of operators 1 ever saw together. Every man was ‘gilt-edged,’ and could hand any wire in the ollice, though they wer all through circuits. We all got th best salaries paid by the company in any part of the count i we just about owned the town, which was small affair then compared with what it is now. The boys were all hard drink ers and of course spent all their money for rum, but they were a set of good-hearted fellows, nevertheless, Well liguor dealer came to us one day with a proposition that if we would settle up or pay something on account at the end of cach month when we got our salaries, he would give us all the credit we wanted between pay days. Of course we accepted and started the credit account within three minutes and ahalf. At the end of the month we each owed half a month’s pay. Then we each went around and paid $10 on account. The proprictor may have ex- pected more, but he said nothing about it, and took what he got and looked appy. Within six months he eame to s and offered to present us with the woon if we would pay what we owed. We declined, and he retired from busi ness in Omaha. T guess he didn't lose much, he sold was of the ‘tarantula’ juice variety, and was war- ranted to kill. And so the reminiscences went on, the stories relating to narrow escapes from Indians when the first lin were strung overland, encounters with train robbers at isolated veen operators who ha s *h other until the wedding hour, and whose acquaintance and courtship were conducted and developed through hun- dreds of mi i In the midst of a stor; along. ‘‘Here, Ihn cable w 10 quad ched h\' Fink, by thunder!” ex- claimed a junior, and the group dis- persed with “Come in again, old man,” y a chiof came Bradiey, I want you for Morrison, go tackle the Amusing Comedictta “Used-Up." Sir Charles Coldstream, « blase -man of fashion, is made to dey ate everything in which everybody else is supposed (o take an interest, with the lanquid remark that Sthere is really nothing in it.” He even ex tended this eriticism to the crater of Versu- vis, down which he looked, but saw “noth- ing in it.”” Such characters are scarcer on ie of the Atlautic than abroad, but notwithistanding, Such men 4 o medicinally stim- i s jaded appetite, overcome their lassitude, and renew the zest of existence. They and others upoa whom the world’s en- joyments uve beginning prematurely to pali, will find Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters a wholesome and speedy ren of vigor and health. Appetite returns, dyspepiia and bilious symytoms disappear, the nerves grow strong, and the hour of retirement is wn- fraught with apprehiension of uneasy repose when this superlative tonic is employed. It remedies fever and ague, rheumatism and kidney troubles. THE LO! FOUND. Mable Reddy Makes Friends Wish to Adopt Her. Soveral notices have been made of the Qisappearauce of a little girl named Mable Reddy. Tui BeE is informell that she is beine kindly cared for by Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Myers of Oakdale, Neb. She went to that plice July her aunt, the wife of a railway station amed_Fuller. Fullers had removed from Oakdale a year before, and the child had tried to return to Omaha, but the condu lnr refused ln take her without ticket pened along, and on aud ascertaining that the girl had no friends he took her to his home to the cre of his wife. He wrote the mother, but re no answer. He wrote again, and on_se a second notice in Tk B telegraphed the mother, but has had no reply. Mr. and Mrs. Myers have no children of their own, and hive become very fond of Mabel. They wish to adopt her and have writien the mother to that effect. The child recipro- cates their affection. Mr. Myers is manager for A. Truesdel, dealer in grain, coal and wagons. In the of Who “FULL WEIGHT ™, PURKE Its supertor excelenco proven in millions of homes for more than aquarter of a century, B riaed by 1he. Uhited Statas Gov rmment.” e o by the heats of the great wivoraities ae the strongest, purest aud most kea'thful, Dr. Prices Cream Baking Powder does not vontatz ammonia, lime or alum, ~ Sold only mmuu l' l JE BA Kluu POWDER 0. New Y g0, t. Louls, INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION Industry, Science and M coflgal Until O;Awber;\lw T, di ngress Meets August 7t] Mo ASGOW, SCOTLAND, " Round Tri _ig E:cunion Tlekeé Via 8 LIN inform: e s'm?"" Bflnwm & CO., Agu.. 53 Brondwny. New York. madeof choicest fancy worsteds, and gotten up in a No 1 style. SIXK 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 mcommg fall goods are already crowding us for room Among the men’s suits are a few extra fine dress and business suits 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 We do not intend to carry one over if we can help it. have left. Summer Suits we An endless accumulation of odd Knee Pants which will be sold at less than half their value. Wind up clearing sale of all our Summer Furnishing Goods, such as Underwear, Hosiery, Flannel ¢ hirts, ete. Closing out of all our Summer Scarfs at ridiculously low prices. A lot of splendid Silk Tecks at 15¢; usually sold at 50c. Another lot of extra fine Four in hand and Tecks at 45¢; such as are generally sold at T3¢ and $1.00, Alot of very fine Silk mer wear, and the r Grenadine Tecks at 35c. This is the handsomest and most elegant S ilar price for these Scarfs is everywhere $1.00; our price this week is 8 arl for Sum- One price only and plain figures. hing @@mpam 14th and Douglas Streets, Omaha. The Rurlington takes the lead. It was in advance of all lines in developing Nebraska. It was in advance of all lines in establishing dining-car carvice between Missouri river poinis 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 into Omaha propar. It was in advance of all lines in reducing the time of passenger trains between Omaha and Chicago. (eave Omaha It was in advance, and is the only line by which you can in the morning and arrive in evening of the same day. ‘'NOW'S THE DAY ummer £ golng at s Our s now price This mark down itimate and many of our best suits, former pri your choice at § $22 and §25,you ca It has been progressive in the past. It will lead in the future. Travel and ship via the Burlington. Ticket Office, 1223 Farnam Street. Depot on Te And NOW IS THE HOUR " ummes is le- includes quali- ties. Men’s fine all wool ce $20, n take Re- membcr we omu- noth- PEERLESS DYES ARE, »THE: BEST UGGLSTE, | ceng ,UH iUn | Has so ! Council Bluffs, | when mad conductc th Street. FOR %\ Ladies and RZTeR Children o \m('l ine LAY !’ER'EAV T, Denver tho Teiephone A telighttul Cuctitute uscous Drugs, 1 | “ihe umluul Rout ! .‘ Yl\lf Car ved upon agent to M. \.,q-m, | servations are turned over 1o train s taking out such 50 that an now sceure berths or- 1, the same as a ’ullman berth is srved and sec ved and se . LOMAX, L P A SteckPlano stemarkablo for - powerfinl sympas mxlll's melgm 0 oars, wi i h Lyt o other louse o the wor uthe ully make such & howi t ler” ouly) . waniod 1 ench S0LD BY LEADING MAX MEYER & BRO. WHOLESA ) anl Misic Deales. ‘uts for Sfl.lNW“Y KNABE CHICKERING and other first-class Planos. Jo k af FOLLOWING BAKGAINS FOR TEN DAY R Jowr \[Qr Down Faument. 1 8teinway Square, cost 8650, for 110 e Squiare, cost Hiie, for Monthly agmonds #10.00 15.00 10.00 5.00 800 10.00 5,00 1u’n s, Sanare, Gont 20,00 o5t 10.00 1 Bners n #i0), for & “Square, 0. 8ifuire, {or $110. il & Wendel Upiiiit ) or i cost 16.00 2000 Davis new, s cost 2,00 20.00 10.00 10.00 15,00 10.00 6.00 500 v & D ivis g “for 2 40 for #ih Ak T it llr' an . don)/1» bunk, cost new 10F 8.+ 1069 600 Bring this ad. with you to avoid mistakes, MAX MEYER & BRO., Curner s!ne th and Fa Iflll N".VAI- “'A’I'll are wul) monthly by ov A o i yrboxbynuhu.umfi;u lormhsmul mail lm Goodm Drug &-u- Omuha, Mb.

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