. . , , 1 T. t 1 „ r THE ( WIAHA DAILY BEE- THURSDAY , MARCH 24. 1887. iH WORTH OF THE SALINE LAP , The Special Oommitteo's Report to the House , Which Was Adopted , STAR CHAMBER CITY POLITICS. ( Secret Work of the Cltl/.ciis' Commit tee of Twenty-oni Supreme Court Doings Oilier NCVVH of tlio Cnpllnl City. IritoM Titr. nix's uscoi.rr nunr.Ai'.l The commlltco appointed by thu house ( o visit the salt basin and saline lands be tween the city proper and West Lincoln have performed the bcrviccs assigned them and yesterday made their report in the house at the morning session. The report is valuable , especially in its esti mate of the land sought to bo obtained by the Nebraska Stock Yards company The reading of the report was listened to with close attention by the house , and nt its close the report was received and adopted. No effort was made after the report was received to got a voto.QTho following is the report of tluj committee : \Ve the undersigned committee appointed to examine the south half of seotlon 15 , tlio northeast quarter of section 'i and the cast half nt the northwest quarter nt section ' } , all In township 10. nurtli ot innge fi , cast of the Otii principal meridian , In Lancaster county. NVbrasKn , bdnn the sanio that Is pro posed lor fcalo In house roll ISt , have had thrt Hiuno under consideration and beg leave to make the following report , to-wit : The south half of said section IS , with the exception of about forty ncres.is nil valuabh ; land , the north part Is ns line , beautiful , rolling land as Is In the country , thu south part line , level , bottom land. Oak Creek runs throinrh It , furnl hlng plenty of water , nnd also very valuable waterpower - power for runnlni ? machinery. The forty acres mentioned above are said to contain excellent clay products suitable for the man ufacturing of brick , tile , turra cotta , etc. The threoclglity-acru tracts mentioned In section (22) ( ) are nil line bottom lands wltn the exception of about lltty acres low or basin land , and Is thought by some to contain boino salt springs or basins. The basin lands on this part are also cnn- flldered valuable for clay products. On the noith of and adjoining said south half of sec tion 15 Is the town slto of West Lincoln , In which lots 25xl4'J feet nro selling for from $300 to S'OO uach ; on the northwest end , ana cornering with said tract of land , the price of land Is quoted at from $700 to 51.000 per ncro , nnd lakine nil thlnits Into considera tion ns compared wlt'i other lands In the vicinity wo belluvo that the nbo\o described Jnnds nro worth on average 5MO per acre lor iho entire tract. Mr. Hoimrod , ono of the members of the committee , made the following addenda to the report : "I signed this report agreeing with my colleagues witli only the exception that I believe tlio entire tract of 000 acres of saline lands arc worth not moro than $500 per aero. " SKCKET POLITICAL WOHK. The secret political schemes having in view a citizens' ticket to bo dictated by a committee of twenty-one , and which the entire community is expected to swallow without a voice in its composition , is making slow progress at present. Attor ney Ryan , to whom was entrusted the BO- lection of the twenty-one men for the job , has made his selection , and a secret meeting of the committee was held Tuesday evening. In fact , everything thus far has been of the star chamber order from the sending out of the first circulars to the making of the committee nnd the sessions of the committee. The chief bugler of the law and order league , F. W. Lewis , has planned the secret service with a good deal of skill and the press of tlio city has not boon able to glvo many facts to the public except when the State Journal , in nn uxuboranco of spirits over its new po- eition in the bolting line , has issued its edict that it won't attend primaries if it can't have its way and won't play any way if Mr. Itoggcn or his friends are rec ognized. In this connection it Is well to fitato that it comes with much directness that ono of the proprietors of the Journal company sent ono emis sary to certain saloon men and gamblers , laying down the law law to them that If they did not come into the Journal camp and help defeat E. P. Roggen , that ho , the Journal pro prietor , would himself hire a private de fective and make it hot for them the coming two years. Of such stuff as this , present reformers are builded. When men got afraid of their own party , and bolt before a ticket of any kind is in the Hold , such proceedings follow close in the wake. At the Tuesday evening mooting of the committee of twenty-one no action was taken beyond adjourning to meet Thursday evening. The meetIng - Ing was hold in Mr. U van's offio and Mr , " A- Sawyer , a disaffected republican , did most of the talking. The meetine was very secret , but the BEE was en nblcd to distinguish the following citi zens as members of the committee : Aus tin Humphrey , H. J. Sawyer , O. P. Din gcs , O. W. Webster , John Fitzgerald , Superintendent McConiff , Jacob Wqrth , Sam D. Cox , J. H. Miller , Secretary F , \V. Lewis , S. \Vatson , E. T. Hartley , H. J. Whitmore. E. H. Chapln , O. C Munson , G. B. Skinner , Chas. Atkinson The political complexion of this list ol gentlemen is easily distinguished ant only the stalwart Journal can nppreoiah it from A republican point of view , whll < the average citizen cannot read the list Without smelling roasting chestnuts. HUIMIKME COUItT DOINttS. Albert W. Gregory was admitted t < practice. Bissell vs Fletcher , continued Camp vs Sadler , continued : Gerver vi Geryor , bill of exceptions quashed and fa Alimony allowed , to be paid In nlnotj days. The following cases were argued am mibmittcd : Atkinson vs Hasty ; Clark vi Morgan , motion to dismiss ; PaxtonCatlli company vs First National bank of Ara pahoe ; Wright vs state ; Boll Bros , v White Lake Lumber company. Cour Adjourned to Tuesday , March 29. The following decisions were handei down : Fulton vs Levy , error from Dotigla county. Atlirmed. Opinion by Maxwell Ch. J. State ox rol. Franso vs Bryant , manda nuis. Writ denied. Opinion by Maxwell Ch. J. W.olf vs Murphy , error from Sowan county. Dismissed. Opinion by Cobb.J Obcrfolder vs Kavanaugh , error fror Plntto county. Reversed. Opinion b Cobb , J. llathman vs Nohronborg , error fror Washington county. Atlirmod. Oplnio by Maxwell. Ch. J. McConahoy vs McConahoy , appon from Dakota county. Modified. Opit ion by Uccso , J. MINOR EVENTS. The Travelers1 Building and Loan a ; Bociation have tiled articles of Incorpora tlon with the secretary of statp. This a : Bociation is located at Long Pine , Browi county. It has a capital stock of f 10,00 in shares of f 10 each. It commence business March 8 and continues twenty five years , the indobcdness being lirnite to fi.OOO. The incorporatora are J. Davison , M. J. Courtrlght ; W. A. Soldot K. G. Brvan. C. F. Ingalls , J. M. Men and S. W. Dwlnnoll. A member f the Kansas legislatun Ircsh from the session in that state , wt n visitor at the capital to-day. The gci tlcman from the south was surprised i the number ot spectators at the Ncbrusk legislature , ana when he learned thi they were all lobbyists he fell from b Beat in a fit and was carried to the dnpo 1 In addition to tno candidacy of Vundc voort for the generalship of the Gran Island soldiers1 homo , It is quietly hinte that Judge Sahler is a candidate for tl position of oil inspector under the no taw and Frank Walters a candidate f < Hate pharmacist. There was an upward tendency in th real estate market yesterday nnd the number of transfers and considerations are on the increase. The West for tlio Worker * . JACKSON. Mich. , Murch 2J. [ Corres pondence of Iho UIK. : ] Within the pabt few days wo have spent much time among the laboring men of this manufacturing mctropillH , nnd especially among mem bers of the Knights of Labor. Wages are low extensively so. Common la borers receive 75 cents to $1 a day. Me chanics receive not to exceed $2 and $3 n day. JSeiit is high and so are the neces sities of life. Few , indeed , are the la borers who arc able to provide plenty for their families. Nearly all are complain ing of their condition , and see no way to bettor it ; and they look with incredulity upon statements made relating to "our blessed" state of Nebraska. Wo have repeated to them the glorious prospects ol a poor man in the west ; the ad vantage ho possessed over ids more un lucky brother of the cast ; how ho could easily obtain for himself , without cost or price , n homo of his own and notunly a home , but a tract ot ! ! ' , ' ( ) acres of rich farming land , which , in the course of u very few years , would bring him a com petence through life. But they are loth to Iwlieve that which every man , woman and child in Kansas and Nebraska knows to be true. These poor men who are working their very life out each day to secure for themselves and families the bare right to .exist cannot believe that they would bo nermittcd to better their condition : nnd they believe that the sumo degree of oppression prevails in the west which predominates hero. Wo visited the house of one of our labor ing friends , at his request , to tell him there , in the evening , what he dared not lose time from his work to hear , about the west. Wo found him located in n tumble-down shanty , in the cess-pool and malaria district. But one chair waste to bo seen in the room within , rough stools occupying the place of chairs , nnd a largo dry goods box , covered with oil cloth , being utilized for a table. This man told us that he paid ? ( ) a month for the privilege of calling this bis homo. His wife , who had but recently arisen from a lengthy ill spell , was more spirit tial than real , bearing but a slight sem bianco to the human. Everything indl catcd poverty of the worst kind. Ho wanted to go west , and wo shuddered as wo thought of the necessary suffering this family would bo obliged to undergo in order to Have money enough with which to buy their freedom from such an accursed slavery. I have in view a series of cheap excursions to bp run to Ne braska nnd the west , and if considered feasible the plan will bo adopted and yon will hear from mo again. N.A.Coi.i : . Fait-burr Facts. FAiitnunr , Nob. , Marcli 24. [ Corre spondence of the Bun. ] The assessors of the county hold their meeting last Satur day , and judging from the published schedule of values upon which the as sessment is to bo made , property is very cheap. If a person who lives in states whore property i ? listed at somewhat near its actual value would read the stat ute of Nebraska , which expressly bays that property shall bo assessed at its cash value , and then should bo told the prices nt which property is really assessed in the state , he would naturally think that real cstato was dirt cheap and personal property of wonderfully poorOquality. There should bo n reformation in the method of assessing , and that soon. it is a cool day when an addition to our booming city is not laid off , and very chilly indeed when several new buildings are not commenced. I think there are at least forty residences now being built and I hear everyday of others to be built. The insurance business is made quite lively and the several agents of whom deponent is one , is wrestling for their share. Another stone pavement was put down last week. Mr. Ingrahain does not pro pose to be outdone by his neighbors and so built the same kind of pave in front of Ins jewelry store that some others have. Wo hope the movement will become general and stone walks bo built in front of all business houses. Uncle Sam is getting economical and the signal service Hags are not displayed as usual. It is all right as it gives the old man with the rheumatism a chance to forecast the weather as ho used to do before the government drove him out of business. Abraham Thicsson who went to Russia ana was arrested , has been board from at last. Our .minister to Russia , Lathrop , writes to C. B. Lotion , esq. , Fairbnrythat he had taken considerable interest in his cose , and that the Russian government had ordered.on the 20th of January last , that he bo expelled from the country , never to return. When Thiessen left Russia , originally , ho was under arrest. Ho escaped and made his way to America and abjured bis allegiance to the Russian government , which was a great offense. His escape will be a narrow erie and he will bo very likely to stay out of the clutches of the bear hereafter. Don't Get Caught This spring with your blood full of im purities , your digestion impaired , your appetite poor , kidneys and liver tormd , and the whole system liable to be pros trated by diioase but get yourself into good condition , and ready for the chang ing and warmer weather , by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla. It stands uncqalled for purifying the blood , giving an appo tile , and for a general spring mcdicnu. Professor Sir William Turner , of the University of Edinburg , has figured out that a whale eighty feet long , weighing seventy-four tons , and possessing a tail eighteen to twenty feet in extreme width , develops a propelling force oi 145-horso power in acquiring a speed of twelve miles an hour. Seven colored men hold a public pie- eating match in Frederick , Md. , the other night , for the prize of a suit of clothes. The successful contestant ate 10 ordinary- sized fruit pics in twenty minutes ; the second , 14 ; the third. 11 ; the fourth , 10 , and the others smaller numbers. No water was allowed while eating. wttt MrtfMMdto IlMitbfilnaai. Dr. PriZft 10 LL YnSl FlKLiD AMD FAUM. on Sprlnp AVork tu tlio Gnrdnn. Philadelphia Record : \\lth the nil- vent of spriiipj begins the work in the garden , nnd the supply of vegetable * and luxuries depends upon tlio fertility of the soil nnd tlio caru bestowed. Some plants arc hardy nnd may bo nut out early , but nothing Iscaincd by haste in nttcmping to f orco plants that delight Invarmtti , unless the forcing process be attempted under favorable conditions. It must bo kept in vluw that frosts may come tit any tl.nc , oven as late as June , and It is not safe to put out largo crops of vcRntii- hies before the middle of May. Onions , lettuce , kale , radishes , spinach , pens , cabbage nnd early potatoes muy take the risk of injury from frost assoon as tlio ground shall bo warm enough to gorml- nato seed. The onion crop is otiu that should always go in early , as it thrives best when the M'nson Is not too warmand not only endures quite a bevcro frost , but the crop keeps well in winter also. Noth ing Can bo gained by transplanting ejrg plants , tomato plants , or melons before warm weather , as any slight check given them will bo materially felt during the whole growing pcnson. The dwarf peas are best for an early sup ply , and require no support to hold the vlncslou" the ground , but they do not compare with the taller kinds in flavor or in quality. Karly beets , carrots and imrsnius can bo put ni as soon as the ground shall bo in proper condition. Asparagus is usually the tirtit vegetable of the season , but it cannot bo secured until a well grown and permanent bed shall have been established. Lima beans , sugar corn , beans , melons , turnips : squash and egg-plants must be classed as sum mer crops , as thcv arc not planted until the ground m well warmed and all dan ger from frost is over. What Is mostly required for a garden is a line soil , not simply that which is plowed or spaded , but ono which is cither harrowed or raked until not a clod can bo soon , nnd tlio deeper the line soil the better. In using manure that which is thoroughly decomposed is brst , but experienced gardners make use of well-rotted com post , assisted by super-phosphate ( ono bag to a garden one-fourth of an aero in extent ) , and the rows nro so laid off ns to permit of the crops being easily worked bv a onc-horso cultivator , but if the hoe bo used in preference the rows may bo closer together. All young vegetable are easily smothered or starved by grass and weeds , and for that reason the gar den must be kept very clean nnd well cultivated. Wends must not only bo kept down but kept out , destroying them as soon as they shove their tops out of the ground ; the same may bo sajd of grass Uy so doing much labor will bo saved later in the season. Seasonable Hints null Buttermilk and creamery skim milk , though excellent food for hogs , should bo fed only as a part of the ration , as the hogs will bo compelled to drink largo quantities in order to provide themselves with a sufficiency. The bolter plan is to allow a ration of ground grain in con nection with milk. Grass may bo seeded upon oats this spring , and it should be done as early as possible , in order to allow the young plants a good start before dry weather. The mam difficulty in the way of secur ing a stand is the failure to put in Iho seed proporly. It should be lightly har rowed or brushed In , It is much better to sell oft" all the sur plus stock than to attempt to feed too many on a short supply of food. The extra animals require food for the sup port of their bodies , without gaining , which supply of food should go to the purpose of increasing the weight , of a fewer number. t It is now generally admitted that no road can be perfect that is not well un- derdraincd. Throwing the dirt to the centre turns oft" the surplus surf ace water , but that which goes down should be car ried off underground instead of partially evaporating from the surface. In order to show what a sheep may at tain in weight it may bo mentioned that a two-year-old grade Lincoln wether was recently slaughtered in England. Its live weight was 433 pounds ; carcass , 304 pounds ; loose fat , 34 pounds ; skin , en trails , blood , etc. , 00 pounds ; waste 0 pounds. It you have a spare piece of ground sow bats and peas together as food for the cows. It makes excellent green ma terial , grows quickly , and can bo cut at any time when high enough. Do not turn stock upon it to graze , but cut and carry it to tbe barnyard for them. If plants be crushed whnn frozen the leaves will wilt and turn dark. This is also applicable to grass when it is cov ered with frost , ami stock should not be turned upon pasture until the sun shall bo well up , as the trampling of the frozen plants is injurious. In buying young trees it Is best to se lect those that nave a largo supply of roots , long and branching. The roots may be shortened before putting the trees in the ground. Trees with tops not too heavy , with largo roots , seldom require staking. There is nothing bettor for fattening a wether than to feed it plenty of hay , with a ration of ono part ground oats and two parts cornmeal. given twice a day , with a few sliced turnips for an oc casional change. March lambs are considered early , but they require careful feeding to bring them into market in time to secure the best prices. They soon learn to eat , and grow rapidly if given all they can consume - sumo , It is not the severe cold that kills the small fruit vines but the alternate freez ing and thawing. Hence the advantage of a mulch , which protects from sudden changes of temperature. A distance of thirty feet apart each way is suitable for apple trees and eigh teen fcot each way for peach trees. The young trees should be kept well trimmed and given good cultivation. Cut away all tbe suckers from thn trees and get the orchard in shape. There is nothing so unsightly as an orchard con taining suckers around tbo base of each tree. It is claimed that the flesh of hogs that are allowed to find their food by hunting acorns and roots in the forests is super ior to that of the best fed hogs kept in pens. The Dorking fowl is now beginning to receive more attention than formerly. It is conceded that for compactness of body and quality of flesh It is not inferior to any other breed. It Is claimed that four times as much nutriment can be secured by converting the waste products of the earth into milk as can bo gained by putting them into beef , pork or mutton. In using carbolic acid as an insectlsido one pnrt of acid to 100 parts of water Is the correct proportion. It may be freely sprinkled on all kinds of plants. It has been demonstrated that roup in fowls and diphtheria in children are Identical ; hence care should bo taken when roup appears in a flock of fowls. Marl li not only an excellent absorbent in the stables , but adds to the fertility ol tbe soil. Mixing it with manure renders it better adapted for plant food. There are a large number of novelties and new varieties of vegetables offered this season , some of them being merito rious. Do not bring the bee hives from the cellar too early , as a few cold days mav be injurious. Keep the hives in a coil place. Potato bugs will eat egg plants if the ttj potato vines bo notplentiful. . They also sometimes cat tomato plants. Sow your tomato sdod in boxes as o.irly ns possible , as there is now but little time to lese with early plants. April is the be.4 month for hatching out young ducks for market , belling them in Juno. Wheat , corn , barley , beans , linseed , hemp seed , rape seed , crushed fresh bones , mustard seed , clover and grocn cabbage are essentials in poultry feeding. There arn nice-looking cows in muiy ; herds that dally rob their master. This can only be prevented by taking tlio weight of each cow's milk morning and evening. If hens bo at liberty 100 are enough for an aero , but if confined of coin-so an aero , will afford room for n much larger num ber. In this case each flock of ton or twelve hens will require a house eight feet square say UOO fowls on an acre. Most kinds of fruit trees thrive best enrolling rolling land. Hardy grapes do well on almost any soil with a little care. Sandy ridges are best adapted to their growth , but sand and loaf mold mixed with under- drain clay will produce largo vines and line yields of fruit. The downs breeds of sheep arc grow ing in demand In this country , says the Implement News. Flock owners aru anxious to try something besides wool for a profit. Tliov sou in Canada and Hug- land that mutton stands side by side with beef , and many are disposed to try the experiment hero. Dr. A. M. Du Bols , of the Fruit Grow ers Journal , favor0 wider spaces , in or chards , with the view of obtaining bettor crops from healthier trees. This result is indicated by the superior thrift nnd productiveness ot those occupying the outer rows , whoso roots have a larger surface ) of soil , nnd tops more tiir and sunlighr. In practice a mixed ration , made up of eqi ual parts of straw and good hay , with n 1 little grain added , will bo found a feed on which any animal will thrive. If tiie hay be clover all the better , as this will bettor meet tlio deficiency of the straw. Fed in this way , stock cat the straw as well as the hay , and the disrostive ma terial it contains is equally valuable fed der. Wo know that .straw fed alone con tinuously to the same animal is of little value. There are many farmers who seem not to rcali/.o how much they lese during the year that a little forethought would pre vent. They will admit that the way in which they feed a certain lot of pigs , for instance , wastes sonic of the food , but appear to think that the loss is so little each dav that it does not amount to any thing. They would be surprised if they should ascertain how large a sum repre sents at the end of the \ car the total of these small losses each ( lay. Providing a better feeding place to save the food wasted , nnd giving better shelter that will effect a saving in the amount re quired to keep the pigs gaining , will in many places save a handsome sum dur ing the year. Nothing but superlative merit can ac count for the pnenomcnal reputation achieved by Salvation Oil. It kills pain. Price ! i5 cents. The Darwinian theory perplexes the multitude. They object to descendants from monkeys * Uut not oven a baby ob jects to Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup. A Lake Michigan captain says that a long course of observation has convinced him that vessels miruud attcr women nro remarkably unlucky , as compared with those bearing the names of men. Ho also says that he never know a boat named Mayflower that wa. unlucky. When nature falters and requires help recruit her enfeebled energies with Ir J. II. McLean's Strengthening Cordia and Blood Purilicr.- There has just died in Beverly town ship , Canada , a venerable wild goose. Thirty years ago Morris Sholland bought it of Mr. Harris , of Gait , who eighteen years before that caught it. How old the geese was when captured , forty-eight years ago , no ono knows. "Mttle , but Oh My. " Dr. Piorce's "Pleasant Purgative Pel- lots" nro scarcely larger than mustard seeds , but they have no equal as a ca thartic. In nil disorders of the liver , stomach and bowels they act like a charm. Purely vegetable , sugar-coated , and inclosed in glass vials. Pleasant , safe and sure. By druggists. A GREAT MISTAKE has heretofore been made In the treatment of rheumatism , neuralgia and licrvous or flck headache. This U evidenced by the failure on the part of thousands of stilYcrcrs to find relief , e\en though they have ex hausted the skill of various physicians and tried numerous so-called remedies , To such Athlophoros U offered as a safe , nurti and quick cure. Its success has been phe nomenal , and yet It Is not surprising , be cause it u HI do nil that U claimed for It. The Athlophoros Co.ill cladly refer any who desire to make an investigation to reliable parties \\lio have been cured by it. J. E. Gillcspie , Kcal Estate and Loan at Atlantic Iowa . . " rhcu- agent , , , o.is. "My - matism fiist appeared in the hip , nnd then extended down into thu legs through the sciatic nerve. I suffered whether standing or sitting , nnd It was with the greatest of dllliculty that I ucce led In hobblng to my oflke each ( lav. I consulted physicians also tiled every remedy I could lean : of without any good effects whatever. My greatest fcare were that I would always have it. As I was writing a letter to this friend in Chicagn , I casually mailu note of my rheumatism and thought * o more about it. But my letter was answered promptly telling me to use Athlophoros ; also Mating his mother's cnsc and cure which was more severe than mine , I nt once purchased a bottle and by the time I had finished taking it my rheumatism was gone , but it was RS little too soon to stop taking beloic it was entirely out of my system. I h.ul another light attact but a bottle of Athlophoros done the work and it has been over a ) c& since. Athlophoros is an cxcclcnt medicine and I can recommend it. Kvery druggist should keep Athlopho- ros and Athlophoros Pills , but where they cannot bo bought of the druggist the Athlophoros Co. , 1S3 Wall St. , Now York , will send either , carriage paid , on receipt of regular price , which is $1 per bottle for Athloohoros and COc for the Pills. I'orllvur nnd kidney dlioues , dyspepsia , In digestion , wonhne n , norrousdobllltjr , ulscnsoi nt wcinuin , conqtlpntion , heutlnclio , impure blood , etc. . Atlilo'ilioroa I'll BLACK WOLF i Or Black Lcprwy , In n dtaare which Is considered Incurable , bnt It lias yielded to tlic curntlvc proper- tic's of Swirr'8 Sritcirio now known all orer the world ns S. S. S. Jlra. Bailey , of Wet Somcrvillc , Ma s. , near llosum , w s nltacLccl ecmnl yearn ago \ > Ith this hideous block eruption , and was treated by the best medical talent , who could only ear that Uia disease was n species of -LEPROSY- and consequently Incnrnblc. It Is Impossible to de scribe her sufferings. Her body from the crown of her head to the soles of her fert iris a macs of decay , masses of fleeh rotting ott and leaving Rreat cavities. Her fingers festered and three or four nails dropiwd OH at one time. Her limbs contracted by the fearful ulccratlon , and for Bcreral years the did not lenva her bed. Her wclcht was reduced from 125 to CO Ibs. I'erhaps eomc famt Idea of her condition can be cleaned from the fact that three pounds of Cosmo- terer to her all-wire Creator. iler husband hearing wonderful reports of the of Kwirr's Hncirio (3. S. 3. ) , prevailed on her to try it as a laat renort. She began It * luo under pro test , but goon found that faertyrtcm was belne re lieved of the | x > lson , aa the tores assumed a red ana healthy color , aa though the blood was becoming pure and ncth e. Mrs. Valley continued the H. S. 8. until last February ; crcry sore was healed ; she dis carded chair and crutches , and was for the first time in twelve years a well woman , tier husband , Mr , C. A. Bailey , Is In bnslners at 17V Vlackstone Street , Boston , and will tske pleasure lit giving the detail * of this wonderful cure. Bend to us for Treatise OB Blood and Skin Diseases , mulled free. THI Bwirr Sncirio Co. . Drawer I. Atlanta , Qa CONSUMPTION. I ! ) potitln noatj let tk. tbor. dlMM * ; by H. OM ttxniilndl or CUM of th * worn kln4 4 of linr .landing hiT b"DCurtd. Inil < Md.u > tmf liByhlthlaili.nuef that I will Mnd TWO BOrTIJtS mil. l * th with kYAI UAnLI TRIATiSBxn thU < H u.t MT inCMtr. OlT > * | tH r. O. tUdms. Vtt. T. A. OMC U 8 , m rear ! K M. T Display at their warerooms , 13O5 and 1307 Parnam Street , the largest assortment of Pianos and Organs to be found at any establishment west of Chicago. The stock embraces the highest class and medium grades , including ? ! Y > FISCH R PIANOS " .wr irii v j LYQN& _ - m mg BURDETT , ORGANS STANDARD , V i IV tl s . w.AUe.A.f Prices , quality and durability considered , are placed at the lowest living rates for cash or time payments , while the long established reputation of the house , coupled with their most liberal Interpretation of the guarantee on their goods , affords the purchaser an absolute safeguard against loss by possible defects In materials and workmanship. LYON & HEALY , i 1305 A 1307 FARNAM STRIfT * RELIABLE JEWELER. Watches , Diamonds , Fine Jewelry , Silverware The largest ftock'.i Price * the lowest. Repairing a specialty. Work warranted. Corner Douglas and 15th ttrects , Omaha. Licenced Watchmaker for the Union Pacific Railroad Cdrnpany. I i DEWEY & STONE FURNITURE A magnificent display of everything useful and ornamental in the furniture- maker's art , at reasonable prices. SOUTH OMAHA Beautiful Residence Lots Also Business Lot On the large map of Omaha and observe that the t\vo anil one-hull mile belt from the Omaha postoiTice runs south of section 33 nnd through the north end of South Omaha. TAKE A STRING And pencil , then get one of J.M. Wolfe &Co's maps of Omaha and South Omaha combined , PUT YOUR FINGER On the string at 13th and Farnam , Omaha's busines center , and your pencil on he string at where Bellnvue street enters South Omaha from the north. THEN DRA W A circle and note SOUTH OMAHA Is , and also that many "Additions , " "Places" and "Hills" are far OUTSIDE This magic circle. THEN STOP And think a minute what will make outside property increase in value ? THE' GROWTH OF OMAHA Is all that will enhance the value of real estate other than ] at ] South Omaha. At the latter point we have three important factors to buildup and make valuable the property : First The growth of Omaha , which has and always will follow the transportation lines. Second All the great railroads center there , thus making it the best manufacturing point of any in or near the city , Third THE IMMENSE STOCK YARDS INTERESTS Dressed Beef Business ; and Pork Packing Industry Will make a town of themselves. SEVERAL NEW PACKING HOUSES Going up this year. A Gigantic Beef Canning Establishment' To be put into operation at once. Away your day of grace when you do not get an interest in South Omaha before a higher appraisement is made. The best locations are being taken Make your selections now : Lots that so/d for $300 in 1834 cannot now be bought for $3,000. THE ! "VI IDTJOTS Over the railway track will make safe and splendid thoroughfares between this city and South Omaha. A STREET CAR LINE Will run to the Stock Yards this year. The minute it does lots will dou ble in value , as this will afford quick and cheap transportation either by Dummy , Cable or Horse Cars. For farther information , maps , price lists , and descriptive circulars a d dress , C. E. MAYNE , Agent.for the South Omaha Land Company N.W. Cor. 15th andHarn ey.