Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 25, 1894, Page 7

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S~ ! } : { el YA LA W JUNE 25 1894 FOR EXCHANGE. MASSAGE BATHS, ETC. = HAVANA FRECKL SPEGIAL NOTIGES. Advertisements for these columns will be taken until 12:3) p, m. for the evenin m. for the morning and Su Advertisers, by requesting a_numbered cheek, ean have answers to A numbered let- ter In care of The Be ors 80 addresscd will be delivered upon presentation of the check. Rates 1%e word first insertion, lc & ‘word thereafter, Nothing taken for less than 5. WANTED- MALE HELP. FOLICITORS, TEAMS FURNIEHED; INSTALL- ment goods. American Wringer Co., 168 How. ara wtroet. B AGENTS, SALERY OR COMMISSION. greatest invention of the age. The New ent Chemical Ink Erasing Pencil. Sells on Wight. Worke like magic. Agents are making $5.00 to $1%.00 per weck For further pars ticulars_ write the Monros Erasing M(g. Co., A Cre Wis. Ti-64 SHING MEN TO TAKE ORDERS FOR OLD gotnbiishod house; salary paid. Awply 158 M1707512 , A GOOD UPHOL GER- man_ preferred. Apply to C. C. Cannon, b, B2 7 NTED., GOODF H st wolling necessity. tigate this, Stmpl 552, Kansas City, Mo TLT FOR LATEST Mary or commissi Dress _ Char 2 WANTED, TWO BOYS WITH carry The Dally Bee. Ay 4p m WANTED, A ST YRK T man, without children. House u monih. Address O 3. VERY COOL, ELEGANT FURNISHED SOUTH front room; private board; detached house; pleasant home. 2110 Douglas. F-M11 ES, A 08£IGAR. FOR 5C. o i % MIBIy1 XQUANGE FOR GOOD "APITOL AVENUE, MADAME BROWA 2d floor, room 4, massage, aicohol, NICE ROOMS AND BOARD, 11 8 31TH, F—4i0—Jy156 FURNISHED ROOMS, WITH OR_WITHOUT board. 138 Dodge. F-Mu03 3¢ DESIRABLE ROOM, WITH GOOD BOARD: fine_location. %10 Dodge. FoMisk 210 MS, FURNISHED OR 20 and 212 8, VERY DESIRABLE R unfurnished. Good ik wt FNids2 HANDSOMELY ROOM with strictly first class board. 3109 Douglas F—068 on Farnam LARGE SOUTH FRONT ROOMS, ensulte, with board; references. street. 3 HARN STREET, FURNISHED NORTH or south room, with board if desired. Terms reasonal F-—M01 2¢ NICELY FURNISHI cnveniences; 2023 St. OOMS; MODERN wvente. ROOMS FOR LIGHT HOUSEKE North 15th, 19 M7 270 FOR RENT--UNFURN1SH'D ROOMS. ¢ UNFURNISHED ROOMS, SUITADLE FOR housekeoping, city water, ete., low rent; north- west corner 17th and Webster st. G—68 [P s i B e Y FOR RENT, STORES AND OFFICES WANTED, FIFTY LABORERS AND ters on rallrond work in Montann and Aska: - free transportation. Kramer & earn Labor Agency, Eleventh and F strents. i WANTED, SALESMAN, ONE WHO HAS SOLD ETOCerien on the road: state expericnce, what hotses you have been with, refercnces and malary expeoted. Address box 1540, Lincoln, Neb. ! BALESM Hacic ol on not. necessary: steady work wtamp. Stack Food department, 2 Minneapolis, Minn. HOME SALESMEN. Tegitimate, much best during hard tim: money and suffering: men experisnce Whatever nr to $60 por week withe e duties; no capital ticulars, free samples o own state and ours by mail 2, Boston, Mass. Only? thos profitable and permanent b app! B— M3 BALBEMEN WANTED, TO SELL OUR GOODS Ty sample (o the wholesale and retail trade: sell on _sight to every business moh or firm; 1lib- which it mave women with: at now making from seting thedr full par- ences in your \dress H. 8., King eral salary; money advanced for adveriising and expenses: permanent position. ~Address, with stamp, King Mfg. Co., C 42, Chicaxo, 1IL. B—Mib5 300 WANTED-FEMALE HELP. WANTED, GIRL, FOR GENERAL HOT work. Inguire 2% Dodge street. C-Miy A_GOOD COOK AT 1510 SHERMAN AVENUE. Mrs. A. Saunders. MBZ7 26 WANTED, GIRL FOR GENERAL HOUSE- work in family three adults. Must cook. Call 2214 Farnam. WANTED—TWO GIRLS IMMEDIAELY, ONE for kitchen work, must be good cook,and one for second work. Apply No. 3 Worthington Place, opposite Brownell hall, near 8. 10th st C—d44-230 FOR RENT—HOUSES. FINE FLAT IN CLOUSER RLOCK AT 703 16th st.; range and all other convenienc #5. George Clouser, room 3, 1623 Furpam st HOUSTS, F. K. D, HOUSES IN ALL PARTS OF THE CITY. THE O. F. Davis company, 1505 Farnam. D—G87 §ROOM COTTAGES, MODERN, CHOICE IN Stanford Circle. C. 8. Elgutter, 34 Bee build- ing. D88 RENTAL AGENCY, 67 BROWN BLOCK.. ) CLEAN, = COMFORTABLE, CONVENIENT, moderite rentals, best 3 and d-room suites for hounckeepers only. References required. Also §room sulte in tenement.” 316 6. 224 st KELKENNEY&CO..R. 1, CONTINENTAL BLK. £ - D501 FOR 1 EO0D DETAC! NINE-ROOM house pitol avenue.~ B. H. Robison, room 1, | fal National. D850 Sk TEMPLETON & PIBRSON, FPaxton blk. D—65 FOR RENT, DWELLINGS IN ALL PARTS of Omaha: call for list. E. H. Sheafe. 433 Paxton block. D- THREE-ROOM FLATS, §7.50. 1418 N. 17TH. D—MSS7 Jy8* FOR RENT, DESIRABLE 10-ROOM, MODERN CORNER BALOON, 94 DOUGLAS. INQUIRE sz 1= 5568 3 MONTHS LEASE OF STORE, 309 S. I'TH. 1—599 300 correspondence solkted. Broken' Bow, ALE OR TRAL stock, centrally located ANNA OF CHICAGO GIVES ALGOHOL | and massage. G, T, GBLLE A FINE _GROCERY Adldress O 8, Des PERSONAL. CHANGE—IMPROVED 16) ACRES, ON, LADIES HAIR DIESSER, 0id " iocation, 1617 Farnam st FOR SALE--REAL ESTATE. — Proctor, €16 8. 16th’ stree RAMSEY MAKES home made bread; try one loaf, ES, LOTA AND K. Dagling, sale or trade. Waterloo creamery, 1613 Howard; tel. SPECIAL INDUCEME HBAML BURNS INVITE Bew art room at any 1o GRORGIA AND V AND PACITIC JEWELRY TO also repalring. 613 8. 10th street PROF. FRANK to the baid; cures dandruff; restores gray both sexes treated Omaha patients who are Room 424, Bee Bullding, Omaha, Neb. ROGLIN RESTOR rtion of our city. be_purchased At prices that would fatl t buy_suburban property. WHEN OUT WITH YOUR LADY VISIT Muller's new lce cream pariors, worth street; everything is new. 1030 Ice eream delivered s present prices sncluding the building. Tel M2 Farnam ste Il A pleasant and convenfent place, 1520 Farnam street, Paxton block; ‘phone, TIL FOR RENT, THe 4-STORY BRICK DUILDING, 916 Farnam street. The bullding has a fire- proof cement basement, complete steam heate ing fixtures, water on all floors, gas, etc. Al ply at the office of the Bee. 191 HAVANA FRE FOR SALE, KLES, A 10C CIGAR Uhias DR. MAXWELL, tional_sanitariuf SPECIALIST, . removed to 408 Paxton block. WANT TO MAKE 83007 AGENTS WANTED. AGENTS IN AND OUT OF CITY; LIBERAL commissions. Apply room- 435, Paxton block. J—876 J STORA OR HOUS and eheap rate. R. W CATARRH TREATED, $4 PER MO o LRI %, Douglas bik., cor. 16th and Dodge. for $300, $10 bilance long MASSAGE TREATMENT, ‘mal baths. Scalp and hair treatment, manicured Post, $19% 8 15th, Withnall bik. Paved street near Chicage stre HOME _TREATMENT TOR LADIES. ith book and consultation free. 346 Bee bldg. Lady attendant. U—60 vast front iot in Hans- FREET_STOP_IN AT 110 and see our new china. M. H. Prices good only till July 1t ND, WHICH DO YOU WANT? paner malled, W. H. Harbeck, WIFE OR HU. CUSTOMERS it you have BSTATE_HAV for_medium_ priced List with Ames, BUSINESS NOTICES. BUY YOUR HAY BY CAR OR TON LOTS. WE A. H. Snyder, 1515 Burt st., tel. 1107 DAMAGED MIRRORS RESILVERED, w N 18 ROEDER'S PHARMACY, 707 N. WIH_ST. HAS REMOVED HIS COAL to 20 So. 16th, Brown block. OMAHA MEERSCHAUM PIPE FACTORY pipes made new. 613 S. 16th. NSWICK, 16TH AND JACKSON, If a house you want to rent? You'll find it on this page. Or on buying you are bent? You'll find it on this page. Do you want a girl to work? You'll find it on this page. Or, perchance, a man to clerk? You'll find it on this page. Do you want to get a bath? HOTEL BRI Special attention to rooms by month. $12.00 to $35.00, Including baths, light and el CHINA DECORATED TOORDER AN ed like new, 106 CARRIAGE T! MMING, GENERAL ¥ top $10 up. Louis Gutting, 114 8. 15t & _E. MORRILL, CARPENTER. OFFIC ‘store fixtures A’ speciaity. | PLUMBERS. b FREE-PLUMBING OF EVERY KIND, GAS steam & hot water heating; sewerage. 313 18 " MUSIC, ART AND LANGUAGE. CK, BANJOIST AND teacher. 1810 California_street i) SHORTHAND AND TYPEWRITING. VAN_BANT'S ECHOOL OF SHORTHAND. ®3 N. Y. Life, Omaha. Ask for circular, 6L TICKET BROKERS. T 1. DAVIES, MEMUER A. 7. B. A tickets bought and sold. 1313 Farnam streot j¥18 P, H. PHILBIN, CUT RATES. 140 FARNAM | | “UP@AU. SUES & CO, Solicitors, Beo | Cuiléing, OMAHA, NEB. Advice FREE, RAILWAY TIME GARD Leaven (CHIC ., BURLINGTON & Q. Afrives Omaha|__Depot 10th and Mason $ |_Omuha TON & MO. T 10th and Mason Donver Expreas 10:05am.. 0.0 Deadwood Express 4:50pm Denver Fxpross :60pm . Nebraskn Local (except Sun.)... 6:5mm Lincoln Local (cxcept Sunday.). 11: X, G, BT, J, & C. B, - Jatr Omaha| Depot 0th and Mason Sta q Kansas City Day 9:45pm_ K. C. Night Ex. via U % | CHICAGO, It 1. & Union Depot 10th & M 6:50am Tives STRER EAS ] Atiantic FExpross ( s im 4 Night Iixpr-as fidvam i > Vestibuled Limited.. . 1:2 pin 1:%pm. Okialioma Exp. (to C. B, ex Sun). § WEST. imA & Texas Colorado L UNION PACI Union_Depot 10U & Maxon Sts.| Omaaa Oklal am 1CAGO, MIL. & ST. PAUL (Arrives Unfon_Depot 10th & on Sts.| Omaba 9:3am 5:00pm I, & MU VALL |_Depot i5th and Webster Sts. adwood _Expross ). Wyo. Ex..(2x. M Expreas (Ex. Sund N folk St. Paul Expres 9:40am Leaves [ CHICAGO & NORTHY N [Arrives . P. Depot 10th & Mason Sts.| Omaha Chicago ~ Express Vestibule Limited [ £:10pm St Louls Express Toouls Express... ... o0pm.. .. opni. Daily (e Leaves _Omaba( §00am. c Sun.). :com (Sun. Only Express (Ex. Sun. St.” Panl_Limited. . 9:4)am SIOUX CITY & PACIFIC, [Arrives P. Depot 10th & Mason Sta.[ Omiaha “Stoux City 10:20pm St. Paul 10:00am Leaves [ SIOUX CITY & PACIFIC. [Arrives _Omahal Depot 15th and Webster Sts. | Omaha G:3pm. . Paul Limited.... 40am 5:30pmn Clilcago __ Limited 9:40am METAL 'CORNICE L. CARTER, 1617 Howard st. iights, smoke stacks, furnaces. —_— MERCHANT TAILORS. _ MARTIN, MERCHANT TAILOR, ESTAB. 5. Imp. & domestic Rovelties. 1507 You'll find it on this page. Or trade for that another hath? You'll find it on this page. SUITS TO ORDER AT COST. S, LARSEN. &ls N. 16th st. Established 20_years. THE OLD RELIABLE TAIL- ‘or, 44 N. 16th, hasegreatisseduced pri his $5 pants and §20 sults; gfl made in_Omaha s W HAIRDRESSING. 8. MORTENSE! pooing, steaming hair goods, WANTED—TO BUY. AKING IN FAMILY, $.50 a day. WANTED, DRES: | MONEY TO LOAN—REAL ESTATE. residence, first-class In every detail, centralls HIGHEST PRICE PAID FOR SECOND-HAND Jogated. Rent, $0. E. l‘L’ihrnfc. L "IIX! furniture, stoves, etc. L. Brussell, 710-712 N. “rEIL ton bl DoM303 N-s57 TS o KLES, A 10C CIGAR, FOR 5C. TENTS FOR RENT 1311 FARNAM STi_)—lfl HAVANA FRECKI A Rizf-dy-15 FURNISHED HOUSE, 6 ROOMS, §25.00; NEWLY papercd, painted; filce yard. Inquire 62 8 16th street. References. D403 26% TED, TO LEASE A REPUBLICAN e 3 . E. E. Shackelford, Gallatin, yaper st once i rd. Gallatls VERY FINE 7.ROOM COTTAGE AT RE. duced price; el at once. Fidelity Trust Com- WANTED, SCALES, CAPACITY FOUR TO unds. Address O 10, Bee. six hundred po 18 Dee Jys pany, 1702 Farnam st. FOR RENT, MODERN HOUSE; REASONABLE | SECOND-HAND FURNITURE BOUGHT AND terms. Enquire 1919 Dodge. D—M440 wold. L. Aluman, 808 & 810 N. lllnN:li. FOR RENT, FURNISHED HOUSE. APPLY = 22 Paxton block. D-Miz0-5i* FOR SALE—FURNITURE. 8. E. CORNER §STH AND WILLIAMS EASY, YOU WON'T MISS YOUR ‘streets, 10-room house, with good barn. paved P:.::’.:';:"fi- pri on furniture & household street, large grounds, shrubbery, fruit, etc. cheap. Fidelity Tiust company, ‘1702 Farnam strect. —M311-3) terprise Credit Co., Gi3-615 N. 16th st goods. Enterp r e aw FQR RENT, DESIRAULE DWELLINGS IN * Council Bluffs; call for list at Omaha office, 432 Paxton block. B. H. Sheafe. D—M66T FOR RENT, TWO 10-ROOM MODERN FLATS, cheap. J. W. Squire, 8 Bee bldg. D83 FOR RENT. FURNISHED OR UNFURNISHED, or for sale, one of the prottiest homes in the city. Modern improvements and heautiful lawn, trees, -flowers, etc. Thomas Boyd, 71T New York _Life. TI-DI4S3 250 MODERN §-ROOM HOUSE, CHOICE NEIGH- borhood, North 3th, fifteen minutes from Farnam, $25.00; worth $60.00. Burns China store, or 708 N. Y. Life. D—M52 2% TROOM MODERN HOUSE, 8116 CHICAGO strvet, $26.00 por month. Apply at same ad. dresa, 3 D—M51S 300 WANTED, MAN AND WIFE TO TAKE FUR nistied cottage July and August; parties going on w vislt; Deat of references required. © Ade dress O 8, Do D—M5T1 26 BLACKSMITH, WANTED, A FIRST-CLA Yor particolnrs write to Do ton, Neb, FOR RENT, HOUSES, STORES, FLATS. Ames, 1617 Parnam. D—ME30 FOR RENT — WANTED, GOOD_ ME priced houses. List your houses for with Ames. D—M5’ ¥OR TIENT, HOUSE 9 ROUMS, MO Dogis & UL D 1OR RENT FURNISHED ROOMS, 3 NICE FURNISHED ROOMS FOR LIGHT housekeeping. 1112 South 1t street. Mt 350 FORSALE—-HORSES, WAGONS,ETC. FOR SALE, LARGE, YOUNG DRIVING AND riding horse. 1609 Douglas street, P—M408 26° LOANS ON IMPROVED & UNIMPROVED CITY 33,000 & upwards, § 10 6% p rnam Smith & Co., SCISSORS, LAWN MOWERS, RAZORS, ETC. Meichoir Dros., 1113 Farnam st. MONEY TO LOAN ON OMAHA PROPERTY and Nebraska farms at from 6 to 7 per cent. W. B. Meikle, First National bank building. LAWN MOW- RAZORS, SHEARS A. L. Underland, LAWN MOWERS SHARPENED AND RE. paired. “W. Boehl, MEAT MARKET. NEATEST | MARKET, A Marsh's Washington market, 614 N. 16th. MORTGAGE LOANS, A. MOORE, 504 W rear 512 S, 16th. Y TO LOAN AT LOWBEST RATES, THE Davis Co., 1605 Farnam st. LOAN & TRUST CO., Douglas streets, loan money on city and farm property at lowest rates of interest. MONEY TO LOAN BEST OF MEATS. AT LOWEST RATES ON improved and unimproved Omaha real estate. Fidelity Trust Co., 1702 Farnam. BEST CHOICE CUT OF MEAT AT Heinzman's market, 705 N. 16th st. GEO. W. KURZ, CHOICE MEATS, 722 S, 16th street. UNDERTAKERS AND EMBALMERS BURKET, FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND 1618 'Chicago, Tel. 90. 1105 years. LOANS WANTED. J. N. FRENZER, OPP. P.0. WM Jy22 MONEY TO LOAN ON FARMS IN DOUGLAS, roved Omaha real estate. improved and untm) Fidelity Trust Co., 1 FOR SALE, A VERY KI) LE HORSE, therefore valuable for family use; safe for any one (o drive; also phaeton and harness, 422 North th street. P—Mi51 25° FOR SALE, A TROTTING BRED COLT THAT can trot; sound, well broken, 15 hands high, dark bay, 4 years oid, trotfed last year in 2:50; upheaded, stylish and all right every way. Should beat 2:40 this year. Price, $125. Box 1212 Fairfield, Neb. DM LE, LIGHT CARRIAGE TEAM, 1130 FRE i, P—M398 I e e LIFE INSURANCE PO LOANED ON RS M S AT T B AN FE Choney ka iy, o BWANSON & VALIEN, UNDERTAKERS AND embalmers, 1701 Cuming st., telephone 1060, MONEY TO LOAN ON IMPROVED OMAHA reul estate. Brennan, Love & Co., Paxton blk. RTAKER AND balmer, 117 Farnam street; telephone, 225 IoANE X B NHEAVR M PALTON RLOCK [ iHRiomyie sTmasavern S WTH ST, TEL also, 24th and N sts. Omuha. + M437 ANTHONY LOAN & TRUST CO.,318 N.Y. low rates for choice ‘securily on Nee d Tows farms or Omake ity proparty TINNERS. FOR SALE—MISCELLANEOUS. BALED HAY FOR SALE. THE STANDARD Cattle company, Ames, Neb., have 2.000 tons of good barn-stored hay for sale. All_orders filled_promptly. Q602 SPANIELS, THE HANDSOME Scotch Collies. G, H. Moore, 1621 Bherman avenie, importer and breeder. 5 J Q -875 Jy1 SUPPLIES FOR AMATEUR PHOTOGRAPHERS Sole agents for the 8 Heyn & Co., pl " BERNARD PUPS, 2101 DOUGLAS STREET. i QM350 Jy) BICYCLES, NEW AND OLD, $20 TO §155; payments: we rent and repair. Omaha Bicycle Co., 87 N. 16th st. Tel. 129. Q-134 FURNISHED ROOMS. 14 DODGE. NICELY FURNISHED ROOMS, GEN nly, 2005 St Mary's ave. VURNISHED BOOM. W7 HARNRY STREET. M3 3 FURNISHED ROOMS FOR HOUSEKEEP- ing for man and wite. Rent taken in board _S19 N Wth E—910 AETNA HOUSE. NORTHWEST CORNER LTH and Rooms by the day or week. E—956 Jy9* FURNISHED ROOMS, 1818 CHICAGO STREET. u E—MITT Jyse FOR RENT, LOWER FLOOR. ALL NICH furnished, ' good location, nice lawn. 0 man and wife. Wil ‘take nt in olherwise wult tenant. 180 Sherman v -G BASEMENT AND PARLOR FLOOR, SINGLE o logother, slegandy funished: reasamable, fof rwmnm ROOM; BATH, 3.0 MONTH. _ 1ol Furnam. B FURNISHED ROOMS. 6% 8. WTH STREET. X PN jysse WELL MNISHRD ROOM FOR MAN AND wire, it desired; good locatien. Ade dress N 62, Bee 380 330 FURNISHED ROOMS AND BOARD YQUMS WOMEN'S ToME. UN ARE OF ‘amen’s Chriatian associdion. 111 8 Ih at. TS SN . ROOMS. FURNISHED OR UNFURNISHED, with board. W6 Cupitel ave Inquire $12.00 BICYCLE NOW $§1.80, $10.00 CUT TO 36525, 360.00 cut to 34260, M. Trolel, 2709 Leave enworth street. QM9 Jy13 LAW DOOKS, WEST'S REPORTERS. APPLY 1309 South 28th sireet. 593 250 ICE FOR SALE IN CAR LOTS. GILBERT Hres, Council Bluffs. Q—Mis3 Jy23 MISCELLANEOUS. HAVE YOUR OLD CARPET WOVEN INTO Smyrna rugs repaired, 153 Leavenworth. s g R-M21§—Jy13 TIN AND SHEET IRON WORK, GUTTERS, done” cheap. City Tinners, 823 N. 16th’ st. TINWARE REPAIRED, E. GREDIC, 16th street. Copper an: CITY LOANS, LARGE LOANS ON CENTRAL Life buflding. MORTGAGE CO. OF NEW York. Capital $2,000,000. Surplus 3600,000. Sub- mit choice foans to F. S. National bank building. LOANS, TEMPLETONSPIBRSON,PAXTOS W =6 UNITED STATE sheetiron worlk. Pusey, agent, W HARNESS. HARNESS, WHIPS, SADDLES, ETC. Tepairing. S. D. Casad, 624 S. 16th street M—966 3 LOANS, 1 TO 6 YEARS, WARRANTS, BONDS. etc. Garvin Bros., 210 N. Y. Life. MONEY T0O LOAN ON CITY AND FARM Amés, 1617 Farnam stroet. GET MY PRICES BEFORE YOU BUY A HAR- Bess. August Bobne, Tl 8. 16th streat "~ MONEY TO " CHA NES . NETS. R LOAN—CHATTELS. HARNESS, WHIPS, NETS. ETC. REPAI MONEY TO LOAN ON HOUSEHOLD FURNI or any kind of security, at lowest possible rates, which back at any time, ELITY, LOAN GUARANTEE CO., TENTS AND AWNINGS. WHY DON'T YOU PUT UP AN AWNING ON keeps out sun, beautifies your resi- dence, costs but little. Omaha Tent & Awning 1311 Farnam St. 383 WOLF BROS. & 00., MANUFACTUR awnings, tents, flags, WygOH, huy. stoc banners. streamtors. 604 Tents ooz rent. HORSESHOEING. ¥ B. BURT, HORSESHOLR, 314 N. W horses, wagons, MONEY TO LOAN ON FURNITURE, PIANOS, at lowest rates in city: trictly confidential horses. wagons, ete. no removal of goods: cun pay the loun off at any time or OMAHA MORTGAGE LOAN €O, 306 South 16th street. A B HARRIS, ROOM 1, CONTINENTAL BLE. AN _ON PERSONAL PROP- Co., 01 N. Y. Lif¢ bullding XML MRS, THOS, MALONEY, WaN. 10TH o TAXIDERMY AND FURS. SEND FOR CATA- logue. George K. Brown, yr., & Co., T8 S 16th. ——— ey CLAIRVOYANTS. MRS DR._H. WARREN, CLAIRVOYANT, RE- Tiable business medium; Tth year at m'k 16 CLAIRVOYANT-PROFESSOR WHITE, THE test clairvoyant of his has arrived in aha. He will read your future life without a mistake. Gives valuable information on all Wil give you thtul advice on all law, money nufitters, and all famil being 'gitted With a rare und wonderful insght into such matters, and never known (o make a mistuke. The future plainly revealed, lovers wpited. ~Freublse hesled. reusites thé scpurated, from whatéver cause, and causes happy murriages. Gives names of friemds and enemies, also the oue you will marry. Tells what to do and where to go to be Tucky. All trouble call. Those desiring rellable inform tion on all aMairs of life or business are invited to_call. All counsel strictly confidential. He can. found 1017 Chicago streat. Hours trom § & m. 0§ pom Sundays § to & B—-M18 26% e ave. P-MTI T M R R Sotscajencen. ! ~ The Hom: Bov Harnes. T 48 LARGE FRONT ALCOVE ROOM. TWO NICE o WrAls, with board Albany, i Dongian Sirese. [ty SSIRABLE ROOMS, WITH BOARD. REFER. cnces. Terms reascnable. 382 N. 1Sth. S ———— Tt % JOMS & BDOARD. 82 N. 1 MRS TUTTLE W Ty ARRIVED, . PETTIDONE MBEDIUM. MADL son hotel, for & few days only. - NSO1 29 © MASSAGE, BATHS, ETC. DAME w8 LOOR, MA! ry MITH, -r MTH D ¥ hen el S i:‘nie'nnhvoi 'n‘\.oi_ -;1‘.;; YORK, HaS aken charge o m Rook's massage pariars, 15 404 13, 38 Nosth ek M PRINTING. BH & CHANDLER. QUICK PRINTERS, K 1121 Farnam & 307 Mall orders get quick agkion REED JOI PRINTING €0. FINE PRINTING 17th stret,’ Bee R EALE. CHEAP, rx}n»ci,A?.als RESTAVE: and lunch counfter, cpponile F. depot, Fremont, Neb. ' YOU WANT TO BU change merchandise, on or address the lon Co., 208 First National ban, Y507 I% SEL, O Wi+ of all kinds. - HAVANA FRECKLES, A 0C CIGAR, FOR §C. Y—M268-Jy-15 ELECTRICAL-SUPPLIES. ARMATURES AND CONV wtorage batteries rechary Omata Electrical Works, TERS REWOUND, lectrical and gent vork guaranteed. ESTABLISHED Address Box 482, Hastings. NTERPRISING \cal printer wh 1o Invest can be put in Address O 25, Bee. T-DARREL STEAM POWER wplendid loeation; mill door; established tr will sell ‘or emchal NEWSPAPER has small sum of money bonanza. H. MAROWITZ LOANS -MONET.S8 N. th St. 1e; running full time: ; principals only m, Kensas. Y—MG 2%° ROUS HOTEL BUSINESSS FOR SALB account of Ullness of pro- x 63, Horton, Brown, Ca., WHOLESALE COAL. JORNSON BROS., WHOLESALE D! ndence solicited. 1% Farnam street. & _FINANCIAL. CABH PAID FOR ENDOWME: Addres A. K great sacrifice; B, THE ONLY SFH(C NT POLICIES Tools and_stock wili invoige 316000, Raker, Gretna. Neb. established five Call on or address W. 8 FOR SALE, BAKERY AND CONFECTION business in town of 609 ants in eastern Ponder, ‘mandger in connection. Al will up. Address O 32, Eve. Bk Bidg., in Kinsler's drug store Teaves | — OMAHA & ST. LOUIS _— [arrives P. Depot 10th & Mason Sts.| Omuhe —.-St. Louis Cannon Ball. * WITHIY A BAIR'S BRADTH, Archibald Forbes in Youth's Companion. The editor of the Youth's Companion has required me to describe in his columns the narrowest escape from sudden and violent death that has ever befallen me. I am a privats in the ranks of the contributors of whom the editor is the commanding offi- cer, and as becomes a good soldier, I salute | and obey my chief. . But this particular order of his gives me to reflect, if T may use a French expression. As I sit by the fire in my quict room and | recall the episodes of a stirring life, T seem to realize that for years“ogether it was lit- tle else than one continuous serics of nar- row escapes. Then, in not a littie bewilder- ment, I ask myself which was the narrow- est of the hundred and one narrow escapes the details of which rise up before me as 1 ponder. Was it my rescue from the broken and battered timber-ship from Quebcc, water- logged in midwinter on the banks of Ne foundland, on that bleak morning when the worn and gaunt remnant of us had aban- doned hope and when the gallant Yaukee Moses Taylor ranged up alongside and took us off in her life boat to warmth, comfort and safety? Was it on that afternoon before Saarbruck, when my compatriot Batty dashed out into the open in front of the Prussian picket, and opened fire single-handed on a whole French brigade? As he was, in the natural course of things, promptly shot down, my Scottish comrade and I ran out and brought him in through the gust of chassepot bullets, Was it on that lurid afternoon of the strug- gle to the death between the Paris com- mune and MacMahon's Versaillist troopers when 1 was stuck up against a wall to b shot by a communist firing party, and fiva minutes later underwent the same experienca at the hands of a Versaillist detachment which had put to flight the ferocious gentle- men of the Belleville quarter? Was it on the hillock in front of Zaitchay in the Servian campaign, when for ten min- utes General Docktouroff and myself were the targets for a battery of Osman Pasha’s Krupp guns, and when the atmosphere about us seemed a chaos of whirling shell-frag- ments? Was it in the Afghan pass, where, as 1 knelt beside a wounded soldier, pressing my thumb on the orifice of his bullet wound that he should not bleed to death, he and I were for some miutes the mark for the fire of the Afridi plcket from the top of the over. | hanging rock it, again, on my long, lonely night | ride over the Zuiuland veldt from the battle- fleld of Ulundi, through a country rife with | hostile natives, when I followed a track on which an officer and his escort were butchered the same night? I put aside altogether the casual risks of battle. The escapes in action are naturally frequent and narrow, but one is comseious of but a very small proportion of them. I have had a man killed immediately bes hind me, and the bullet that slew him must have passed between my left arm and my side. That might be called a narrow escape, but T did not know of it until after it ha happened. Then the axiom that “a miss is | as good as a mile” came Into force. | After the attack on Le Bourget by the Prussian guards, I counted fourteen bullet | holes in the great coat of Mafor Von | Altrock of the Queen Elizabeth regiment, but | that gallant and burly soldier, who had | shown the way over the barricade, was not | i 1 in the least impressed by those evidence: of the narrowness of his suprising immun from seathe, because his escape was over and past before he knew how close it had | been In that he dfffered from the weak nerved Scottish farmer, who, going home drunk one | night, rode across a crazy footbridge ove hanging a precipitous cataract. Returning mext day te look at the piace, he was so scared by the dauger e had escaped that he | died on the spot! | Perhaps I may best fulfill the tenor of our editor's requisition, by narrating an ex- perience, throughout which I quite wealized my imnifnent dunger, and in which, toware | its clo 1 had resigned hope of escaping with life. | After the capitulation of Parls, Bismarck | insisted that part of Paris shouid be tem. porarily occupled with German troops. The entry was fixed for the 1st of March, and th force of occupation was (o consist of 30,000 men, drawn from the Sixth and Ninth Pruse sian and Eleventh Bavarian eorps i When about to enter the French capital, thos roops were reviewed by the venerable German emperor. From their siege quar- ters on the Seine's left bauk the regiments of the chosem comtingent, since early morns | ing. bad been streaming on to the Long | champs race course on the edge of the Hois de_Boulogne They were men with memories of th i | tand grapple in the wocds of Worth, of the | | with flast of the bloody ravine of Gravelotte, Pece appalling mortality of the siege of Metz They had met Ducrot's fierce battle on yonder slope of Fort Champigny, and Vinoy's Jast despairing sortie from the shoulder of Fort Valerien. Yet they wers men brisk hearty and healthy now as if fres their home quarters From the top of the mill of Longehamps Cascade, 1 looked down on ths ing with 8t. Cloud near th gradual formation of the long, ghit line, facing toward the Sein and Mount Valerien in the 1 beheld the glint of the b ing bann steel helmct and breastplate, the swart allen guns ther distance. ynets, the danc he great staff and suite of the imperial the center of the wn prince gathe foreground. The s guns thundere and the air thr 1 to the nteasured cheers ing of the soldlers, as the stalwart old mon. of the Te sward, greetod his son, along_the,serried line. All the the German pire followed t groat mass 0f EOrgeOusie The infantry marched past to th of the massed bands, the cavalr & of sabers and thunder of hoofs, and then the heads of columns h the allees of the Bois de B the direction of the Porte Mailiot of_entry Traveling swiftly and by a more direc route, I reached the Arch of Triumph in a vance of the heads of tha marching columns Staying to witness the review had th a tons gailoped acr gate much too late to see a historic feat. It was t of a young Bavarian, who, with six ng dos tachment. He leaped hLis horss over the rch, and rode under the structure commemoratiug S0 many th troopers, had headed the first enter chains surrounding th: French victorie: Hours ago the quartermasters had quietly come in with their escorts, and by this tims ed the task of chalking on the quarter to be occupied, the spe. effic detail of men which each house was to had fin} doers of th accommodate. Ahe long lines of cav troopers. rd on thigh, loung sat on the doorsteps, taking in Paris accord ing to their sedate unemotional wont. The windows in th sces were fairly oc any respectably dre upied, thou; renchman wa abroad and no ladies. But on the broad sidewalks swarmed tatterdemalion gamins in wild profusion—young rascals of extra ordinary pantomim! corded the music of the Teuton bands. Already the versatile rogues had learned to mimic the harsh words of command and the somewhat clumsy gestures of the soi die impunity. As 1 sauntered down the main avenue the Champs Elysees in advance of the Ger- man infantry 1 met the crown prince of Saxony, the commander-in-chief of the Army of the Meuse, riding at a walk toward the Arch of Triumph. During the last three months of the siege in the prince’s headquarters, and had experi- ses at his hands. 1 had been anxious to obtain permission to telegraph copiously in the evening from the of Paris I had for the most part live enced many kind army office in the forest of Montmorency and as he pulled up with a cheery greeting I took the oppurtunity to ask for the favor A short colloquy on the subject ensued between him and his chief of staff, with the result which I had hoped. Then the prince and his staff rode on, I strolling downward toward the Place de la Concorde. Suddenly there was a clatter of galloping hoofs on the asphalt, and Count Vitzthum, an aide-de-camp of the prince, reigned up his horse on the sidewalk in front of me, bringing from his highness the courteous message that my old seat at the headquar- ters table was still being kept for me. Right from the Arch I had observed three or four persons following me pretty closely They were respectably dressed, perfectly quict, and might have been either homest but suspicicus citizens, or professional spies. They hung about during my brief interview with the prince, and were close up to me when Vitzthum momentarily blocked the sidewalk. Down the Champs Elysces they kept dog- ging my heels, and at length, near the Rond Point, onc of their number, which had con- siderably increased, came up to me. He,| civilly enough made the request that I should accompany them to a police office in the Faubourg St. Honore for the purpose of giv- ing an account of myself, since, although ian attire, 1 had been marked as being in suspicious’ familiarity with the being in civi “‘enemy.” The request struck me as opportune, be- cause I had been apprehiending some diffi- culty in getting out of the quarter in Ger- were, As my passport nd journalistic authentication were quite in order, I did not anticipate any man occupation since all the cgresses barred by Fremch troops under arm bother at the hands of the police. Telling the French person what I was, and showing him my passport, I replied that I should be glad to accompany him, but that I could not do so until I had seen the German infantry now marching down the Champs Elysees, In full occupation of the Place de la Concorde and the garden of the Tuileries. He bowed and jolned his friends, who, leaving a couple in close observation of my- selt, strolled a little way apart to where a group of very sinister looking Frenchmen stood about a German officer in Cuirassier uniform, who was sitting quietly in the saddle under the shadow of the crape cov- cred statue of burg. T knew the man, and they knew him, too. rd glances at the massive form of the great war horse were charged with baletul meening. Bismarck once or twice looked down upon them with a grim Their lurid upwn smile under his mustache. At length the most daring of the gentk men of the pavement emitted a tentative hiss. Bismarck, with a little receptivi gesture of his gauntleted hand, bent cver his saddle bow and requested ‘‘monsteur’ to oblige Fim with a light for his cigar. The man writhed as he compelled himself to comply. I felt sure that in his heart he wished the lucifer were a dagger, and that he had the courage to use it Presently 1 informed my friends that I was at their service, and they escorted me across French toward the Rue Botssy d'Anglais the neck of which extended a line o soldiers, with a scething French mob be hind it. My cscort and the officer had a a gap was made, and 1 was behind the line and in the very heart of brief parle: the frowsy mob. My escort either abandoned me or were hustled away, I never knew which. But I did know that I was alone in a dangerous from which rose fierce “Cochon!" ete. The nearest rascals clutched and buffeted me, ring were striking and venomous thron yells of “Prussien while those in the secon at my bare head with their sticks. 1 made no resistance, but from the sticks. I made & wrench to one side and got my back against a street door. Now, for what it was worth, my en: In a rough way I ¢ lHeve I spolled suudry of the nearcst faces. 1 kmow I cut my own knuckles to the by mics were in my front But the thick sticks kept hammering on my head; bottles began to fly; and at last e to tha hed with shonts and yells of triwumph, and I found myself being dragged along the gutter on lasts, who loudly f dragging me to nt fountain and drowning me in its elther a stick or a_batile felled gronnd. Then my legs were chite my back by genlal enth proclaimed thelr inte an adjace basin. Other cheerful patriots now surrounded me, making various kicks at my body and head. One whole seuled persons jumped on that it waos y senses leaving mo 1 had no other thought my echest. 1 honestly belleve now all over with me, nd w n 1 felt than that this was the advance of death When 1 recovered consclousness 1 was | lying on a wooden guard bed; all blood and mud, and in rags, surrounded by a number of soldiers. 1 was in a French military d me at the the bayonet, and T was now their post. Its garrison had res point ¢ prisoner. They gaye me some brandy, and washed oft me some of the blood and mud. As 1 revived, my firsc thought was to search for my notehook, in whick I tad written out in | Aps TeView. To my boreor 'L was gome; Alovg with the full a descripuon of the Longel plateau over against Sedan. They were men with lections of the fathomless mud and the from s, the shimmer of sunlight from 55 the nd then slowly rode rinces of palr—a musio arged ruck 1e in own me 1 down the Champs Elysees were ry horses standing at their picket lines still saddled, while the 1 about or houses in the Champs | scarcely faculty, yelling like demons and emitting from time to time a concerted shrill whistle that killed or dis- The impudent varlets had thus early gaged the temper of the Hussars who kept the ground, whom they mocked without ceasing, in apparent assurance of mply tried to bore though and get freo. The pesple wers 50 compacted about me that they had no space to maul me badly. But the throng grew denser; 1 was being crushed, and iy head was swimming because cf the blows uld bex a bit, and 1 be- ;w tall, n the pocket of which it had een While T was Internally bewailing myself, a citizen fn a fine glow of triumph rushed into_the post Volla!™ he shouted, as he waved aloft my notebook. “Here s evidence that the villain is a spy! Hoere are his notes—the lies he has been writing about our unhappy 1 could have embraced the man, frowsy as he was. His fa study when, in the gladnoss of my heart, I offered him a 6-frano plece. The implacable p accepted it Hy and by, under the esoort of bayonets, for the mob was stiil dangerous, I was taken, my rags covered by a soldier's greatcoat, to the bureau of a sitting magistrate two streets off. My conpanions in duress were & man who had stolen an ink-bottle, and a woman who had been caught speaking to a German soldier. I had no dificulty with his worship. For- tuna my passport and eredentials were In a pocket which had not been reft from me by the mob, He released mo, and with an {nimitable shrug und gesture of eloguent patriotism, begg me to excuse “the lttle incon- ven 1 had experionced on account of not unnatural escitement of the Paris populace excitement of the Paris populace had taken a good deal of skin off me, but for- tu ad broken no bones. The good magistrate took me to his dressing-room I lent me a coat in which to walk to my In the afternoon 1 drove to the Crown Prince of Saxony's headquarters, and later the same evening started to London with my budget of news o other medicine has equalled Huod's saparilla in the relief it gives in severe cases of dyspepsia, sick headache, ete. Elegant music tonight Courtland beach. | ERASTUS BENSON ON THE CANAL. OMAHA, June 25.—To the Bditor of The lee: Kindly grant me space to say some- thing in reply to Mr. Kilpatrick's recent communieation against the canal in gen- Al and the real estate men in particular, Not one sentence of the long, rambling and contradictory article rose to the dignity of 1 argument, and it would be unwortny of a reply but for his attack upon the real estate men. 1 want to say to Mr. Kil- patrick in the outstart that his abuse of the real estate men of this city was uncalled for, was ungentlemanly and his accusations untrue Mr, K. says the city Is not in a “sinking condition, and 1 agree with him entirely (but some of his statements, which 1 wiil quote, seem strangely at variance with the idea),’ but the manner in which he under- takes to prove it leads one to believe he has not been a close student of politicul economy. He say et ue carefully analyze the condition of the city,” and for the purpose proceeds to divide the in- dustries of the city in four divisions, banks factories, stores and real estate m His division reminds me of that eminent scien- tist who divided the human race into three divisions, men, women and preachers. First, he argues the banks are prosperous because they have more money than they can use. I believe it is generally admitted that jdle money, like idle men, is an indi- cation of stugnation in business, He says the factories are not doing what they would like, but are not worse offt than the others; that the wholesale trade 1s a little uncertain; that the retail trade 13 overdoing. Whéther he is afraid the canal will bring factories and stores and no_cus- tomers for their wares or whether he fears it will bring too much prosperity, 1 cannot make out. “But he says, “What we want is to be quietly let alone,” and as a final argument that the city does not need a stimulus, he says that under the hammer the property of the city would not sell for more than' the assessed valuation, After thus malizning the good name of the city, he cries out: “For heaven's sake, let us sive up this foolish cry that we are in a sinking condition,” and then goes on to ympathize with' the poor laborer who though willing cannot get work, who, he say has been induced to come here under the false ery of unusual prosperity In all this he seems to get mixed up about as bad the woman Who said If her sece ond wedding had come before her first wedding she would never have been mar- ried at all, Another weighty argument against the canal is as follows: 4t is said it would give employment to our people, but it would not only do that, but it would also Lring a large Influx of population, the worthy and the unworthy, and when the work ‘was done we would likely have condition _even worse than last winte This argument is too weighty to be answered, but I dare say that many of the willing laborers who, he says, cannot get work, would be foolish enough’ to hail with delight a prospect for a eteady job for a year or two, blindly and ignorantly over- looking the fact that their job would cease some day. ding with what he calls a careful sis of the industries of the city, he 1 come now to an industry (if it be called an industry) which I8 in a sinking condition, and the people engaged in this occupation, whatever you call ft, are truly in a sinking condition, and_they are the people who ure clamoring for a canal, or for anything under heaven, profitable or unprofitable, which may afford them relief. I refer to the real estate deal- ers, ¢ ¢ o They sold houses and homes to our laboring people, and indeed to many others, at foolish and fictitious values, and took mortgazes upon these homes. * * * The mortgages planted upon the homes of the poor some five years ago are now falling due and bearing their natural fruit. The poor men who have been paying part of the principal and the intercst ang taxes arc now no longer able to pay, and they are belng unfortunately foreclosed out of house and home,” and much more of the same kind of stuff. I want to say to Mr. Kilpatrick that T know real estate men in this city who pay more taxes in one year than he does in ten; that 1 know a real estute man who has' bullt over 200 cottages and furnished homes for as many families, and never had a single foreclosure. I know another and still another who have bullt over fifty of the handsomest homes of moderate cost in and ne osure. 1 know another who er 100 bufldings, ging from small cottages to large dwels lings, who never foreclosed a man out of his’ home; and when all this building and improvement s going on, Mr. Kilpatrick is living in a rented house and doing busi- ness in a rented store, and I want to ask him If, as a matter of fact, he owns in his own right a single plece of property in the city of Omaha The foreclosures going on are not by the real estate men, but are by loan Institutions such as Mr. Kilpatrick is interested in, and he knows it. SRASTUS A. BENSON. B bl We could not improve the quality if we paid double the price. DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve Is the best salve that experience can produce, or meney can buy. e Zoulogical garden Courtland beach. A Boston Union Depot. The new union passenger station at Bos- tou of the Fitchburg and Bbston & Maine ruilroads s especially noteworthy for itn train sheds and for its heattug and lghting em. Twenty-three tracks had to be covered, and to accommodate them a train shed G40 feet long and 472 feet wide has been built, Part of this is an old shed, the now portions of eight spans covering two tracks each, and one span covering a single teack. This structure is bullt of 00 tons of stecl and glass, the latter hav- ing an area of nearly four acres, and Is supported on 128 columns. The lighting and heutiag apparatus form one of the largest isolated plants in this country. There ara twelve 125 horse-power boflers. of which six furnish steam at elghty pounds pressura for heating, and six supply the engines witi stoam at 125 pounds. Instead of building a high chimney, the draught for the bollers is furnished by two powerful stesn faus, eleven feot in diameter. Two air compressors for the interlocking apparatus, a number of pumps, five 200 horse-power and one 100 horse-power Westinghouse engine make wp power plant. The electric apparatus comprises two 125-volt, 125-kilowatt generas tors for operating the draw bridges and turn- tables, one 220-volt, 62-kilowatt generator for the eleetric clevators, one T%-kilowitt generator to charg the storage batteries for the switehes and signals, and two altere nating machines for supplylng lghts a8 distant points. MR S Switchback avd carousal Courttand. e —————— When Baby was sick, e gave her Castorin, ¥ When she was & Clild, she cried for Castoria, Whien she booame Miss, she clung to Castoria, \7hen she had Children, shie gave the Castorily

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