Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 27, 1895, Page 19

Page views left: 0

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

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

Text content (automatically generated)

i ¢ then his attention was called to my humble THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, JANUARY 27, 1895. 19 JOHN ROCKEFELLER'S PRIDE Bketoh of the University of Chicago and Its Inmates, BTS OF COLLEGE LIFE QUAINT Omaha Lepresentatives In the Institution ~Dr. Harper's Compliments—Extent of the Reform Wave In Chieago. CHICAGO, Jan., 25.—(Special Correspond- gnce.)In Chicago this is the era of investi- Bation. You must be a person of very little gmportance if you are not elther being inves- gigatel yourself or acting on a committee hat 1s investigating somebody or something Bome very interesting facts are being de- weloped, such as an official who has twelve re- fations tn the public employ, another who draws a talary of $4,000 and hires a man to Mo his work for $1,000, or a commissioner who draws $3,000 a year In that capacity and at the same time is employed in a city night ol at $80 a month, Tho j<o:le like to be amused, and perhaps mothlag more amusing, to the spectators, has been attempted here for some time than the #chools for policemen. To sec forty or fitty of “the finest" trying o accommodate their manly forms to desks and tcats Intended for children of 10 is in itself a spectacle that deserves to be classed as unique; but to see that same forty or Aty trying to manage their vocabularies and pens falls just a little short of the pathetic. One Bhowed his knowledge of the ethics of his profession in this wise. When asked, “How shoull an officer treat a citizen?' he an- wwerel promptly, "'Tis the citizen that whould trate the officer.”” Another “builded bette: than he knew,” when, in response to the question, “What is a misdemeanor?” ‘he replicd, ““Any ordinance passed by the city gouncil HERE REFORM IS NEEDED. If the people of Chicago are really in ear- mest in their efforts at reform, and aim in a philanthropic spirit at the greatest good to the greatcst number, 1 would respectfully Sugge:t that they establish a schiool for street car conductors, from which diplomas may be issued for common decency and ordinary in- telligence. When a stranger is told by con- ductors w.thin half a mile of that remarkable group of buildings that they have never seen or heard of the University of Chicago, it is apt to strike that stranger as being rather peculiar to the least; but when these worthics intimate rather pointedly that the idiocy and ignorance belong %entirely to the strange 18 apt to strike them, that is, if it happ to be a masculine stranger, but if it happens to be a feminine stranger, she smiles and is a villain for the time being, and then god and writes them up. THE CHICAGO UNIVERSITY. That part of the city surrounding the uni- versity grounds is decidedly uninviting, par- ticularly upon a dreary winter day; but you soon forget all this when you are once in- side the great quadrangle, especially if you are greeted by a quartet of familiar young wvolces, each announcing that it is its own er's {ntention to show you the finest thing in the university. The finest thing in the unl wversity is cbout as numerous as the prettiest baby in town. You grow rather suspicious as you are being told, “‘Our new telescope is tho largest in the world.” ‘“This university has the largest library of any university in the world.” ~“This university has the great- est number of women graduate students . +of _any university in the world,” and much more to the same effect. But you find on Investigation that it 48 all true, After you have been taken to hear Prof. Von Holst vivify history, Dr. McClintock make a_hackneyed Shakespearean play scintillate with new meaning, and Asso- clate Professor Tolman read Wordsworth with tiie voice of a Booth and the manner of a demi-god, you are quite willing to add, you must certainy have the finest teaching force in the world in this university. The Walker museum is in a rather chaotic state at the present, but It contains so much that youare anxious to see that it gives you the samo helpless, hopeless feeling that you experienced at the never-to-be-forgotten fair, with the wonders of the world before you and only one miserable pair of eyes to look with. The most indolent student can hardly avold absorbing an education, and the possi- Dbilities for a diligent one are scarcely to be calculated. WORK AND PLAY. But all work and no play is not the motto here any more than all play and no work. The play, however, no matter what its char- acter, is not under the supervision of, but With 'the co-operation of, the authorities. President Harper at a reception given by the young ladies of one of the “Houses” is a revelation. In appearance and manner he zeminds you very much of Chancellor Can- flold. In commenting upon the fact that there are only four students from Omaha in tho University of Chicago, hoe remarked, “That is not to be wondered at when they have one of the finest universities in the country rght there in their own state. He . praised in no stinted measure the chancellor of the University of Nebraska, and when told that the Omaha boys at Lincoln said that thelr chief was like Arnold of Rugby, he exclaimed, “There, now, some one is always saying of that man Canfield what I want them to say of me.” CELEBRITIES AT A RECEPTION. At this same reception, chatting gayly with tho students present, were such celebri- tles ds Mrs. Alice Fréeman Parker, J, Lau- mence Laughlin, Prof. John Dewey, Martha Foote Crow and many others. Indeed, you were in dreadful uncertainty lest the inno- cent looking gentlemen meekly holding your tea cup might be a Ph. D. professor of clas- sical archeology and Greek eplgraphy, a Ph. D. professor of comparative osterology and paleontology, or something clse equally appalling. “Spreads,” which usually occur on Friday evening, are another innocent form of jollity permiited in maderation by the “Heads of Houges,” For genuine unalloyed hilarity commend me 0 a spread. Raw oysters served in coffoe cups, olives In bon-bon boxes, sandwiches on blotting pads and salads In sugar bowls soem (0 galn a new and altogether delightful favor. OMAHA REPRESENTATIVES. Omaha has every reason to be proud of her representatives. Allan Hopkins and Heury Clarko are still what are termed new men, but Scott Brown Is In his second year of residence and a memper of the Glee club and (he base ball nine with which he hopes to visit Omaha next summer, At the recent convocation | cago Audltorium, where there were 0 many learned people gathered that you rather wondered' they let you {u, a dozen young women In cap and gown flled dp to recelve their certificates from the: Academle college of the University of Chicagd, and no brighter eld in the Chi- or more rming face looked from under the mortar-board than that of Lila Cole Hurlbut, Omaha High school, '91. Other representatives of the Omaha High #chool In Chicago schools are Fred T i, who is studying medicine in the Northwestern university, and John Oury, who was the proud winner of a medal In a revent oratorl- cal contest in the Northwest Division High school, THE MASCOT. But we must not leave the University of Chicago until we describe our Interview ‘with avother celebrity, fondly known as *“Humps. visited a coffee room near the foot ball grounds, much affected by the athletes and Glee club. Here I found a number of these young gentlemen regaling themselyves Wwith strong coffee and doughnuts and mince le, of which fact we hope Mr. A. Alonzo tage will take due notice. The ostensible object of my visit was a glass of warm milk and a sandwich, but the real one was to meet “Humps," Anon he came, kicking the door with great vigor and announcing that he desire! a cup of coffee and a banana. This sather pecullar combination was served and self, but he only kept on eating and eyed mo in silence. At last I ventured to take the initiative and say, “You play on the foot ball ball team, I believe. Are you the center Fush®' Whereupon he stopped eating long enough to reply, “No, I's (he mascot. In trath, Humps is about Gy years old, but dressed in the padded trousers and Baroon sweater, with the white “U. C." on THE GIRL I'D LIKE TO MEET, i Music by F. LITTLEJOHNES. < Tsj—;]_r ou Words by A. DRIGGS. Allegretto moderato, e s = — ——b—Ff 1, Ftiends, f now 2., But when this girl will to you've chanced to tell, A-bout a girl I love so well, meet, You'll never more thissong re - peat, She’s - the This., That of my fan - cy she’s the belle, You'll find the peach has lost its sweet, T'd like to you'd like to girl girl Her hair ) From board-ing-school she just has come, She’s live = ly,sweet and full issmoothe and soft and brown, Her face is ne’er marred by a frown, She’s the sweet-heart of of fun, But her mouth is full =N ‘[ =N 0| 1 B ——_—_ :_' - all boys in town,She’s the girl I'd like to meet. of chewing gum, This girl you'd like to meet. } When down the street she’ll gaily walk, You’ll sce the chappies stare and talk,And Copyright, 1804, by THE NEW YORK MUSICAL RECORD N~ pipes the “Go It Chica” with much enthusi- | Cauldron, the Devil's Glen, etc. Said the | her class was the largest ever graduated |some act of self-sacrifice in order to prove asm and a very shrill treble. traveler: “The devil seems to be the great- | from the university. their devotion for each other. Tom-—Yes; “He goes just wild at a game and is such | est landowner in these parts!” “Ah! sure, [ In Cleveland there is a great hullabaloo | that is supposed to have been the origin o an inspiration that the campus feels quite [ your honor,” replied the jarvey, “that is 50, | over the matter of allowing scholars to dance [ marriage. ompty without him,” explained one of the | but he lives in England. I think he's what | in the public school bulldings. The Meth- | Chauncey Depew was reported recently as they call an absentee landlord in Ireland.” Chureh Treasurer—Why do you limit your contribution to a nickel; don't you know that the Lord loves a cheerful giver? Brother Amen—Oh, yes! and that is why 1 give valy a nickel. A Protestant magistrate once had a little walf of an Irish boy brought before him for some trifling misdemeanor, WIshing to as- certain how much the child comprehended of his duty to God and his nelghbor, he asked him if he could say his prayers. The boy promptly repeated the Lord’s prayer, and turther volunteered that he could “say the “Hail Mary.” The magistrate testily replied that he did not want to hear that, but re- quested him to repeat the creed. The child, much frightened, began to do so, but when he came to the clause, “Born of the Virgin Mary," he stopped short and anxiously said, cleven. Standing on a table he gave a sample of his prowess in their foot ball yell, ending with, “And every time we buck the line we go! go! go!" He also informed me that he had just had his pleture taken in full uniform for a man who was just going to put it in a book. He is the spoiled darling of the campus and the idol of his grandmother, who keeps the coffee house. Humps' other name is Humphrey Inghram. THE GENEROUS FOUNDER. The university was founded by John D. Rockefeller and he Is continually bestowing new gifts upon it. Three million dollars Is a great deal, but it Mr. Rockefeller wants to get the worth of his money let him disguise himself and visit his Kingdom a la Haroun Al Rachid. He will see and hear there enough to make odist ministers of the city have protested against the practico on the ground that the children of many parents who object to danc- ing are brought into the way of it by this custom. The Vassar girls recently decided on a uni- form to be worn in the college, to consist of a black sergo dress with cap, the cost of which would be $3.60. Rich students and poor alike agreed that distinetions of college dress should cease, but the president of the instituticn, for reasons far from clear, has vetoed the unfform. The new building of the South Dakota uni- versity, bullt by the citizens of Vermillion and Clay county and presented to the state, is described as In every way creditable. Its cost is nearly $50,000, and as itistands on the campus it almost obliterates painful remind- ers that a disasirous fire is among the inci- about to marry a Miss Collins, but Chauncey declares he has no more thought of getting married than he has of going to heaven on his private car. De Bach—Of course there are some com- forts which men with wives have that bach- elors do mot, but, after all, a man has to give up a great deal when he gets married, doesn’t he? Longwed—Y—yes; every cent, the most of us. “You'll let me come to your wedding, dear, of course?’ “Well, I can't promise. My people are so enraged at my choice that 1 hardly know whether I shall be allowed to g0 myself.” The older a man is when he gets married the sooner he commences taking his lunch at noon downtown. She—You must remember that ours was a nent, He—T means 1t him a very happy man, despite the weary “'m'l"‘:f;“;uVfiI'““‘“{:“"Ig ghe's turned up again | goney of the university's history. you like better you'll break load of care millionaires are proverbially The Galena, Ill, Board of Education has 5" “And It T see any one I like supposed to carry about with them. He would EDUCATIONAL, adopted regulations as to the use of the flag I'll sue you for breach of prom- would have heard, on a certain day last on school houses. Instead of regulating the week, a crowd of young men repudiate with scorn the innocent suggestion that perhaps Mr. R. had a great deal of property in that nelghborhood that the University of Chicago made more valuable, and best of all he would hear on almost any day 100 or o vigorous young undergraduates sing with much en- thusiasm, but not very great technique, the song whose chorus {s: —_—— THE UNIV] national stancard at regufar periods, as has been the rule, it will hereafter appear at the masthead cn about fifty anniversaries of nota- blo events in the history of the city, state and nation. By this arrangement the study of history will be stimulated and a patriotic impulse given to youth which cannot fail to result in good. — Ohio built than in 1893, Free text books used in common in the public schools I8 made a cause of the alleged growing prevalence of diphtheria in the Bos- ten schools. Joseph Banigan, manufacturer, more schocl houses last year RSAL ROUTE, Ella Wheeler Wilcox. As we journey along, with a laugh and a 501 ee, on youth's flower-decked slope, eacon of light, shining fair on the slght, the Providence rubber has given $50,000 to found a John D. Rockefeller chair of political econcmy in the new School CONNUBIALUTIES. The brautiful station of Hope. A wondertul man 1s he, of the Soclal Belences of the Cathollc Uni- AF d T e P T T APl pays Dr. Harper versity of America in Washington, Wrhesls e Phake 1is @row smarter, NN i A Dbill has been introduced in the Indiana we climb, The total sum appropriated for the schcols of New York City in 1805 s $4,962,423. 1t s more than $300,000 in excess of the appropri- ation made a year ago, and §500,000 more than the appropriation made in 15893, The students of the South Dakota State university have recognized the “‘new woman'' by placing a woman on the team of the three students to represent the university In an And our youth spee And with hearts that are numb with' life's SOrTOWs we come To the mist-covered station of 5 away on the yea The boys of the U. of C. It that would not make his *‘weary load of take @ short vacation, nothing can Speaking more seriously, he would see that he was almost a special providence in the lives of many honest, earnest, struggling young men and women, and If money can buy any pleasure greater than that it must legislature requiring applications for mar- rlage to be signed by at least one resident treeholder of the county fn ‘which the bride or groom reside. The object of the measure is 1o put a check on the Gretna Green scan- dals for which Jeffersonville is notorious. Clara—He has proposed three or four times, and I don’t know whether to accept him or cal ars, sl 1 we pass, where the milestones, s of our dead, to the west, and gleams in the dying be'very aloe to be rioh. o cROWLmY, |oratorical contest with students of the North [ 89h Maude—l would. Seppose he should = C: LEY. | Dakota university. _‘{Iv 3! x All rest is but change, and no grave can IMPIELIES, Miss Mackenzie, director of public kinder- he marrlage laws of ~ Wisconsin | T " “estrange gartens of Piladelphia, has béen invited by | Permit couples to enter the state and be | The soul from its Parent above married by the first minister or justice of [ And, the peace they happen to run across, with- Miss Elizabeth Harrison, the well known au- ng the rod, it saurs back to its thor of “A Study of Child Nature'” and presi- People who think that a minister has an easy time to earn his salary forget the | amount of eriticism that he has to endure | dent of the Chicago Kindergasten college, to [ OVt Bolng through any formalities what- To ¢l from the members of his congregation accept a position in Chicago at her own [ Ve : 3 A member of the Georgla legislature, rep- | Price. Trivvet—Miss Flop claims to have made| muo giamp put by the Boston postoffice on resenting & north Georgla constituency, i Dr. Winfleld Scott Hall, late professor of [ 1,000 refusals of offers of marriage. Dicer— conversation with a northera man, was | physlology at Haverford college, Pa., That's easily explained. When young Callow | 8l letters malled there formerly consisted has a. ,the Lreast. He attends all the games and asked by the latter what was the attitude | copted the Dayls professorsnip of the same | 8sked her to marry him she roplied: “No, @ |of half a dozen straight black lines two inches of his district. Ejecting some tobacco on | department in the Nerthwestern Medical uni- | thousagd times, no." long. These were rather meaningless, and it which he was ruminating, the representa- | versity of Chicago. Dr. Hall is now In Zu-| A Pennsylvania judge has recently declded | poourred to some genius that anything em- tive innocently and pregnantly replied: | rich, Bwitzerland, engaged in the study of | that a marriage license record is a public | N ¥ “Baptist! strongly Baptist, sir bacteriology. | document and open to inspection by the |A1ating from Bostcn ought to represent an A tourlst was belng driven over a part of | Miss Morrison, the San Francisco girl who | People; that, In fact, publicity is the very [dea, so he made the lines wavy, put some the country in Ireland where his infernal | recently teok highest honors in the medical | Object of the law requiring a record of mar- | stars in a white space in the orthwest cor- majesty appeared to have given his name | department of the University of California, | Flage licenses. ner—and, behold, an American flag. The to all the objects of interest In the locality, | Is the first woman to win highest place there. | Kitty—You know that when two people | postoffice adopted the new design, and now {or there was the Devil's Bridge, the Devil's | Her success was the more remarkable sinc ' are deeply in love they are eager Lo perform Boston is more proudly patriotic than ever, | FAMILY OF LITTLE PHIL Quiet and Happy Home Lifein the National Capital, DOMESTIC TASTES OF THE CAVALRY LEADER Mrs. ridan Correct Misconceptions of Her Husband's Character—Memolrs to Be Complied by Colonel Sheridan. To those who are accustomed to think of Sheridan as the smoko-grimed warrior on a foaming charger, leaping fallen cannon in pursuit of a flying enemy, the pretty home where his widow lives seems in strange contrast, the animated picture coloring the popular fancy, and a sight of her fresh, young face out of keeping with what we would Imagine to be the wife of one who won his fame more than a quarter of a century ago on the Virginian battlefield The Sheridan home is a neat red brick on Rhode Island avenue, says the Cincinnatl Enquirer. The interior is a gem of dainty decoration fn exquisite taste, and fs full of souvenirs of Little Phil. In the square hall is a marble bust of the gencral, and in one corner nds a rack, upon which is a silver-studded saddle, presented by the Mexicans to the soldier. The two parlors are bright with ornaments and pictures, most of them such as present the warrior on horseback, and on a table stands a hand- some bronze figure with a leapin ced representing the common fdea of ‘“‘Sheri- an's Ride. “Nothing fs more untrue,” Mrs. Sherldan sald recently to a caller, “than the idea regarding the general's disposition. Nearly every picture and poem represents him as frenzied with excitement and dashing away on a prancing steed. The real facts are that he was very quiet and reserved in YOUNG PHIL SHERIDAN. action, and never displayed the least signs of the dashing excitement with which he is credited. He often told me that when he made his famous raid down the Valley of Virginla that he rode lelsurely. along on a sleepy horse. At home he was a quiet man, fond of reading and of domestic life. “All or most of his papers I have pre- served, and some day they will be written up, I will not do the work, but it is probe- able that the general's ‘brother, Colonel Sheridan, will. The war papers, such as of- ficial orders, are preserved at the War Rec- ord’s office, but the private letters, many of which are interesting, are here in the heuse. “I met the general when I wad scarco more than a girl, and was with my father at his post in the west. The general was then a man a great deal older than I, and after our marriage we were removed after some time to Washington. I have four childre Mary, who has just made her debut, the two girls " who are now at a convent school in Phialdelphla, and Phil, tho boy of about “Phil is very fond of war and everything that relates to soldlers, 5o when he s old enough we will send him to West Point and lot him foliow in the footsteps of his father. Just now he goes to school in the city. “Washington Is the home which T expect to keep as such for the future, for most of my life I have lived at the capital. When 1 was a child my father was stationed here be- foro we went west; 8o, of course, I love the place and feel at home nowhere clse. “Every day, nearly, I get requests for au- tographs cf the general, and I have now glven away so many that I have scarcely ono left. Of course I do not mutilate his letters by cutting off the signature, but on old checks and similar documents I often find a namo that has been signed by him." Mrs. Sheridan Is a pretty woman, with a slender figure, dark hair arranged gracefully over a low, white brow, an oval face lighted by bright brown eyes. In manner she Is gentle and sweet, with pleasant, sunny ways, and there is no one who has more friends than the quiet little wife of Phil Sheridan, Mrs. Sheridan goes little in_soclety, but seems to prefer remaining at home. Mary Sheridan, who has just made her debut, is very popular, and has recelved a great deal of attention from her mother's \rien two girls who are at school are twins, and for many years when they were small chil- dren together they used w be seen hand in hand walking about the streets of the city, and every one knew them as “the Sheridan twins.' Mary Sheridan is a fine looking girl, with her father's open face and his kind, hearty ways. She has a pretty, plump figure, and enjoys nothing more than the novelty of s cial life at the capital. But Phil, in whom is reproduced the very image of iis father, is generally the center of attraction to srangers. He is a splendid 1ooking boy, and to see him in a mimic bat- tle with his playmates and hear the merry rings of laughter over the lucky blow from a snowball one cannot help but think of the real conflicts, In which no one was more prominent than General Phil Sheridan. A MAN'S SENTIMENTS, Washington Hatchet, Girls that are wanted are good girls— »od from the heart to the lips; Pure as the lily Is white and pure, FFrom its heart to its sweet leaf tips, The girls that are wanted are home girls— irls that are mother's right hand; at fathers and brothers can trust to And the little ones understand. 1 the hearthstone, 'n nobody secs; ) folks, wi o wise girls, That know what to « say; That drive with a smil 1 soft ' word The wrath of the household away. The girls that are girls of ense, Whom fashion can never deceive; Who can follow whate is pretty, And illy to leave, wanted g The g wanted are careful Who thing will cost; Who use with a prudent, rous hand, But see that nothing is lost, The girls that are wanted are girls with hearts They are wanted for mothers and wives; | Wanted to cradie in loving arms The strongest and frallegt of lives. The the witty, the brilliant girl, There's & constant steady demand, But, oh, for the wise, loving home girls, There are few who can understand, ~ IMPERIAL HAIR REGENERATOR. lustrous nd Is Turkish does not crimping COLORS 6. Light Chostn ut dold Blondy Ash Blonde, Prico $1.00. $3 finest L i )i recelpt of Z-cent 1. Black. 2. Dark Brown i, Medinm Brown. 4. O Atnut it the wont rial Venus Tint stamp. IMPERIAL CHEMICAL MFG. CO., 292 Fifth Avenue.N.,Y. IN OMAHA: SHERMAN & McCONNELL, 1513 Dodge St = Locomotor Ataxia, Epilepsy . . ., AND ALL DISEASES OF THE SPINAL. CORD FIND READY AMELIGRATION FROM USE OF MEDULLINE, THE EXTRACT OF THE SPINAL CORD OF THE OX, PREPARED UNDER THE FORMUUA OF Dr. WM. A. HAMMOND, IN HIS LABORATORY AT WASHINGTON, D ¢, Price, Per Phial of 2 Drachms, $1.00 Columbia Chemical Co.,* WASHINGTON, D. C. SEND rOR 800K KUHN & CO. AG .. TS FOR OMAHA. PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRIES By purchasing goods made at the following Nebraska factories. If you cannot find what you want, communicate with the manufa turers as to what dealers handle thelr goods BAGS, BURLAP AND TWINE 11th-st. BRUSH. " THE S. M. GUNSAUL (0. Manufacturers & dealers in all kinds of brushes Office and factory 1020-31 8. 15th street. " THE NEBRASKA BRUSH FACTORY. 4 A B Green, brushes of all kinds, Manager. Manufacturers ot 507 8. 13th st,, Omaha, Neb, BR WH. PRESTON & C0. Manufacturers of Preston's Californfa Flakes, Sickle brand self eaising flour & yeast. Do you use Preston's besc flour? BAKING POWDER. Manufacturers of Mrs_ Keith's Pure Baking Powder, Txiracts & el Rising Thuckwheat ail grocers. Gi5 S. 13th st Tel. 1809, BREWERIES. OMAHA BREWING ASSOCIATION. Car load shipments made in our own reffigerator cars. Blue Ribbon, Elite Export, Vienna Export, and Family Export, delivered to all parts of clty. iR ACTORIE FROST & HARRIS. Carrlage & Wagon Makers. Carringes, buggles, phactons & wagons always on hand & made to order. 131315 Harney-st., Omaha. COFFEE, SPICES, BAKING POWDER: CONSOLIDATED COFFEE (0., Coffee Roasters, Spice Grinders, Manufacturers German Baking Powder and German Dry Hop Yeast. 814-18 8. 12th street, Omaha. FLOUR. S. F. GILNAN. Manufacturer of Gold Medal Flour. C. E. Black, Manager, Omaha. OMAHA UPHOLSTERING C0. Manufacturers of parlor furniture, tables & folding beds. streets, lounges, din- ing 28th ave, Boyd to Sahler UNON LIFE INSURANCE CO. ver one million dollars go out of Nebraska every year for mo better insurance than is fur- nished by the Unfon Life of Omaha. Agents wanted in_every town in Nebrask: antedilafs D ICE AND COAL, SOUTHOMAHA 1Ck AND COAL GU- Domestic & steam coal. We have the best. Of- fice 1601 Farnam-st. Telephone: Office 873, yard 1766, J. A. Doe, gen'l manager. IRON WORKS. INDUSTRIAL [RON WORKS. Manufacturing & repairing of all kinds of ma- chin engines, pumps, clevalors, Drinting presses, hangs shafting & couplings. 1406-§ Howard-st., Omaha, PHOENIX FOUNDRY C0. Fire hydrants, water & gas pipe, specl fronts & ttings, street Ry car wheels. Archis tectural Iron works, Office 307 8. 10theat., Omaa, PAXTON & VIERLING IRON WORKS. MErs of Architectural Tron Work. General ‘l:‘;nmdry, Machine and Blacksmith Work. En- gmuhn. s; boller ry & Contractors for Fireproof Bulldings. Ry. & So. 17th Btreet, 7 % Manufacturers of flufd extracts, & wines, compressed triturates, lets, pills & sclentific medical novelties, elixira, hypodermic tabe syrups, Omahu, CRIDS. MALTRESSES, 0 L. G DOUP. Manufacjurer_ Maltrossen, Spring Tods; Jobber Feathers and Pillows. - North 14¢h and Nicholas 8y, Omaha. NIGHT WATCH, FIRE SERVICE, “AMERICAN DISTRICT TELEGRAPH. The only Ine it. Dest th rates. 1304 Dougl OV i BALL FACTORLES. "RILPATRICK-KOCH DRY G00DS C0. Manufacturers & jobbers of the celebrated Ducks Lrand shirts, pants, overalls & duck clothe 1001-3-6 Harney-st. Factory KATZ-NEYINS €O s & Loys' clothing, pant, 202-212 8, Manufacturers of me irts & overalls, 11th-st, PAPEE BOX TiE OMAHA PAPER BOX €O Manufacturers of all kinds paper boxes, shelf boxes, wample cases, malling tubes, ete, wed ding cake & fancy candy boxes, druglst & jowelry 1208-10 Jones-st., Om SHIRT FACTORIES, J. Ho LYAXS-- -}LIK/ A YHIBT (O, Exclusive custom shirt tallors. 1615 Farnam street. Telephone 908 VITRIFIED FAVING BRIVK, HENKY BOLLN, OMAHA, NEB. actory in Lousville, Cass Co Quality of brici nieed Lo be us oua as any mavifactured Henry Bolla, aui outside of this siate.

Other pages from this issue: