Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, August 31, 1886, Page 4

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s Bdition) fnehiding Sur o be made pa, THE BEE PUBLISHING € . ROSEWATER order of the compu Sworn Statement of Circulation. ate of Nebra punty of Doy rretary of {he Bee Pub- llslnnu company, does solemniy swear th Subseribed and 28th day of August, Notary Publi T'zsehuck, being first duly sworn,de- oses and suys {1 Pub lishing company, y circulation of ‘the month of January. tual averaze L 1846, 12,45 copi 8 copies for July, 1856, Subseribed and sworn to_before i day of August, A. D, Notary Pubiic. ought to sign the pledg iNE keeps very low these days, s only playing *possum. ust what they nt regarding silver. im Laird on the Sccond district for a third term, and all the people have to do is to ratify the order. Turer men have taken a drop from the Brooklyn bridge, but that is nothing compared to the drop taken in Mexico by Special Envo; Tre national campaign committees of both parties are reported to be They can't assess and volun- few and stingy. tary contributions ar ies in the percentag inerease of bank clear: Omaha was thirteenth on the list of the It was a shrewd move on the part of ns to make a fool of Special i filling him full of an outrage for which ernment can demand Envoy Sedg no satisfaction. riotous spirit in Belfast is being held in check, but there 1s almost daily evidence that the undercurrent of feeling 15 still strong and only needs a fayorabla opportunity to burst forth again with devastating v and the Mexi- onn war cloud have not as yet affected needed to give wheat a rapid upward tendency is s war cloud bigger than a man's hund. It seems only fair to credit Cutting with unexpeeted modesty m placing the damage to himself from two months’ im- at only $10,000, { cents would more repay him for the lost tim prisonment fe-saving servic most thorough and efficient m the world, Thisis acknowledged by Admiral Ward of the British navy, who wus for many years connceted with the royal bout institution of W don't know whether Senator Man- n has any influence with the demo- al, but somebody who has his ear ought to whisper to him that the Omaha postoflice clorks and better entitled to prompt and efficient diswibu tion of mails both d This city is ay and night, ing (In- Knights ul Labor. A Pittsburgh paper professes to ha p] an attempt was some time since made b a faction of the order to derly, and it is understood tha be brought to light wssinate Pow: matter will Richimond convention, hat ussembl ge promises to be of ox- traordinary interest, alike for the frionds and opponents of the o Honorable lsaac Powers cordially en- dorses Church Howe's eandidacy. only illustrates the old adagoe that birds of a feather flock together. . reminded that Powers was one of the whitewnshed Church Howe in the legislature of 1877, now be in order for the ex-Honorable Ed Carnes to commend Howe to the publicans of this district. ed on that whitewa Carnes was sh comumittee WaLL strect is having a season of re- was the dullest of the year in stock rent week doe 8 not open with flatteri f improvement. press inability to ace of affuirs, but perhaps one re the fact that the street has not for many yoars boen so deficient in great opora- tors as it is at prn reports rvegardin, sreantile trade are ex: wlactory both from New York and other So far as the Brokers ex- unt for this state At the same eastern trade legitimate business of the countr eerned, the outlook for the autwun and winter is regarded as very favorable. DAILY PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING. Van Wyck's Double The terrible ator Van Wy he has m Pay. innonade to which Sen- Kk has been wte his appeal to the raska has been merely a | of blank cartridges. There h been noisy explosions of powder & L clonds of smoke, but_ the senatorial tar It. The charges which have been inst the senator do not to the interests of the statc s dared to charge him with negleet of duty or willful ¢ nes memboer of drew double pay 1 cong and colonel in the army. The charge has no bearing whatever upon the con duet of General Van Wyek as senator from Nebraska, It ean scarcely he con srdered as an effeetive argument o pre vent his re-clection. Bot it may as well be disenssed in all seriousness to show ty what desperate and contemptible means the monopoly press will resort in order to ereate prejudice upon Senator v W yek moa public man, The senator hag not seen tit to deny that during the war he served in the double eapacity of congressman and commander of a regiment. He has not seen fit to deny that he drew double pay during one session of congress. This may be a most terrible offense in the cyes of his traducers, many of whom tought the battles of the country gallantly among the home guards. Van Wyck was by no means the only man who held a commission in the army and served in congress at the time At the outbreak of the war Senator Sprague, of Rhode ‘Island, was made a major-general and served in the army between sessions of congress. General Gartield was elected to vongress while he held a commission in the army While we eannot say positively that he drew double pay during a portion of his term, we have very little doubt that he did. If w tly informed Gen- eral Amas elected from Wis- consin while he held a commission. In all probability he servedin the same con- gress with Van Wyck, and ten 10 oue drew double pay for a fow months. The fact is that the fire in the rear by the copperhoads and rebel sympathizers of the north made it imperative for the safety of the republic to place loyal men of known ability firmness in congress during that very critical period. These men reluetantly left their commands in the army for a season when congress was i sessjon and sume returncd to the front the moment their congressional services were ended. Inas much as the pay of congressmen was fixed by the year, members who served fighting was most active, took their leave during the winter, but were retained on the army pay roll until mustered out In the case of Senator Van Wyck the meanness of the ault appears more despicable when it is borne in mind that he organized and equipped at his own ex- pense a fifteen company regiment known as the Tenth Legion, and paid for their transportation to the front. Inasmuch he has never been reimbursed for this y, the paltry pay of a colonel for or four months while congress was in session is hardly worth notice Qif it were not for the great hue and ery that has been raised about it. The * ctual Paid" Fraud, The Sunday Herald appeared with the following cards at its head argest aceual paid circalation of any paper be- tween Chicago and San Francisco,” and any paper published in Nebraska,” Now what does the Herald mean by ctual paid eirculation Wili its pub- lishers please explain, or stop its brazen imposture? Does *‘actual paid 1 tion ” mean a gilt-edged hst of e select subscribers? How dare they claim a larger cirenlation than any paper be tween Chicago and San Francisco when they know that Kansas City, St. Pauland Minneapolis papers cireulate all the way from 12,000 to 18,000 daily, as against less than 4,000 of the Herald’s bona fide daily circulation? to lay claim to double the circulation claim were true, it would cirenlate over 25,000 paperg a day, which every intelli- falschood. The “actual paid” cateh, upon advertisers Isa very clumsy aevice, What does *‘actual id” mean? BEE recoives pay eve wurday for about 45,000 papers sold Qur ing tl of seven days to its le in Omaha and Council Blufls, “actual paid” civenlation, or is regarded as delivered on trost? The B and Nebraska fully dailies, which each month, Is this “actual paid” cireu. lows dealers to return or unsold papers which he make a bogus showing? The remaindor of our daily circuls from time to time by agents. of all other Nebraska dailies. then does “*‘actual paid'’ come in? that it has double *‘the actual p. lation of any paper in Nebraska, Where is it In Omaha its actual cir and less than 1,200 all told, In the same as the eireu Couneil Blufls of the BEE in Omaha, supplied L deliver; advertise its i this imposture only de seribers it would wake little difference, P i s N 6 A R fora provement contrast | busine th of the known wishes of his constituents Nobody, not even the most malignant enemy, has ever charged him with cor ruption as a legislator, or with making use 18 position 1o feather his nest Nobody dares to assert that Van Wyek lias betrayed the trusts veposed i him by the men who cleeted hin and by th people whom he has represented with sueh signal ability in the natonal | lature The only grave charge brought against Senator Van Wyek by his oppon ents s that during the war he | the week hefore and throw diseredit | chances | and m the army in the sumner months, when* * Double the actual paid ecirculation of | What right has the Horald of any paper in Nebr when it knows that the Bre has an actual paid circulation of over 12,500 daily. 1If the Herald's gent person knows to be an outrageous which the Herald has invented to impose The weck sees of eirculation 15 this t tobe : sells throngh dealers in Towa three thousand are paid for at the end of lation, oris it a give-away on the inflation system of the Herald wuanager, who al- keep stacks of sends out to ion is in part prepaid, and in part collected This istrue Where But the Herald pompously prociaims lation is a fraction over 800 by carrier other words, its cirenlation in Omaha is about tion of the Bek in The regular subseription y carrier is now over 4,700, This does not melude papers delivered to dealers. But the [Herald with about one-fifth of this circulation has the audaeicy to ulation as double that of any paper published iu Nebraska. 1f ed its sub- THE OMAHA DAILY ut its main object 18 to swindle the eredu- who has not the this all talk alittle t the methods by 1o obtain lous castern advertiser, means to ascertain the fraud is not stopped we more plainly, and exhi which the Herald is money under fs truth, 1f trying o pretenses, The Business Situation, Business 1l comparatively quiet in some branches, but the conditions are vipe for improvement, and the indica tions are everywhere wors end®ur ny prosperons fall than they have been at the outset of sov cral preceding seasons, Merchants and manufacture e corresponding chieerful and hopeful. The jobbing dis tribution of manufactured goods is fairly tive, and in many lines shows an im over the b e of last week In nearly all with the condition of trac ne last year is very favorable this ti farlures occ country last 156 the wring week number 201, ainst week and previous Failures in the Middle states in Canada Southern ht Cotton prie es have been the political une and siness in unfavorable market news from Liverpool, | and as compared with a 1-16 to § of a cont pe crop year is dr business is done on a moderate for home consumption and export, generally aceepted estimate of the prob able outtarn of this serop is 000 hales. The trade in cotton more acl in johbing devartments fair first hands. D the production of week ago pound lower. for future delivery. Tne market, fore, is in excellent shape and firm. Wool has been shaded slightly in price in exceptional instances. ‘There o good many buyers can ets, and large ¢ concessions, but business at current warket rates is quiet. Manufacturing clothiers are having a good teade in heavy goods, and are giving only moder- but or- ason, and indieations point to a good fall trade. ate attention to spring weight ders are fairly satisfactory for the Other branches of the woolen-goods trade are fairly active, and ues in ali lines are very firm. Increased activity 18 noted in the jobbi in leading markets throughout the coun try. The improving tendency. Export business in wheat has been much Clearances Tess have active the past week. contivued liberal beeause sold for August shipment; been alullin the Iatter foreign buyers. The p port buying, large receip! wheat eenters aud an demand f ial halt in ex west, fecling in speculative o eflect has been measuy volitical news from of values, with oc duo to the fo urope. on war talk, has slightly improved in some I 3 ins, but the we not indicate any m: general situation, corn is light. The Gra Nebraska is pr state. Nex Reunion. minently tatives in of Nebraska. more of represe Army organization now in eamp at Grand Island. Extens ud llm citi memorable event. vious Nebras| a. As the the union become more and interesting and impressive. memories of vatriotism, valor and priva- tion of the most critical er: of the republie. They r tade which the nation owes to the men of 1861-65. Nebraska, although a terri- tory with less than 35,000 population at the eivil war, fur- nished her full guota of volunteers to the of these mbled at Grand Island, eagallantly through the entire war, the breaking ot of union armies, and veterans, now ¢ man, se Tre this county. It would ol and ture to sell their votes. Covren HOwe fearful of defeat at Beatrice, reserve a nomination to the legislatur where he expeets to get even on the ponses of his congressional campai Ur to the present time, nobody but | Pat MeArdle and Corliss are talked of as ioner on It seems to us mber can be found in Doug candidates for county the republican ticket. that better las county for that important oftice, comm We bave heard of the man who tried to pull himself over the fence by his boot- This same genius is trying to “actual paid circulation dumped by the cartload into straps. boom the Herald by an Omaha backyards and alleys, ne cold wave, whi acked all tr this summer, has at invigorating influence. Cavrca How relu coln to carry him through We must keep up the boom. ing bonds should be carried majority Mi. SEDGWICK, th who wus sent by * leged outrages upon Ame celebrated his arrival capital by painting the mnd winter trade | phiysicians anil wonld like to see departments the t The throughout | as | w The inerease is mainly castorn, | snage to the infant continue wing to its close, and seale both The 6,500, - goods is ana smand is absorbing hle fabries, and a good many orders are on the mill books there- a ssing the mark- lines conld be moved at g trade in dry goods ithracite coal trade shows an but thvre has nm at winter sing move- ment of spring wheat from the north- have promoted a more bearish les, but its bly ofiset by the The dnft jonal interruptions been The corn crop outlook has ities s reports do change i the Export demand for a soldier rly every regiment that served m the armies of the union has a score or the Grand The eighth annual reunion of the veterans is o preparations have been made by the of- The attendance prom- ises to be greater than that of any pre- emblage of the boys in blue in years roll by these gatherings of the gallant defenders of more They reeall in the history all vividly to the present generation the debt of grati- is no use for ward bummers and bilks to aspire to the legislature trom be reckless for her party to nominate men who pros- titute themselves for hire at the polls, who only want to go to the legisla- is hedging already. He scos the handwriting on the wall, and he holds in X~ h has been side- last struck this part of the country, and suf- fering humanity is bracing up under its son the railroad bosses and the penitentiavy ring at Lin- The pay- by large legal luminary tary Bayard to in- vestigate the Cutting alfuir and other al- an citizens, in the Mexican anvient city red, in company with a party of young Mex- BEL: a fool of him Mexi Sedge san bloods. He has made self and Secretary Bayard. The can authorities ought to send Mr wick to jail for ninety days for drusken ne<s. We hardly think the American government would dendand his rel tted on - Mex s offense being comu i Union Pacifios ean play base ball it wh KINGS AND QUEENS, onee in agr The Prince of Wales is giving dreadful of fence to his countrywomen by dancing so mneh with Awerican beauties. Weh Wah, the Zoni prinees one into the bric-a-brae colleeting business, and is said to be fascinated with old ehina, Queen Margharita of ftaly prefers women afew clever Americans hang out their shingles in Anda usi The Prince of Wales lias deelined to ac copta testimonial plate, valued at §12,50 trom the commission ot the colonial exhibi tion. The Queen Regent of Spain 18 at La Granja. | She loves to sit and taik King, Spanish baby lan who crows like little bull-tighter, The fifty-sixth Franels birthday of the Emperor Joseph was celebrated throughout Austrin the other day with great festivity, A man climbed the spire of St. Stephen's ea thedral, 464 feet high, and hung an Austrian flag on the cross at the summit Queen Vietoria has never taken Kindly to Aweriean beauties, and recently refused to extend an invitation to a certain enter ment solicited on behalt of American society woman, even though the Prince ot Wales added the influence of his name to the plea, Queen Vietoria once beiy ceremony in anorth of Engly was brought to her for a signature. she inseribed it as usual, ictoria, Then her favorite danghter's s desived and was only written Finally the wife of the mayor it an important 1 ity a paper Beatrice, was called to sign the paper and not to be outdone by any | alties, she wrote mere ¥ unhesitatingly Queen Vietoria s evidently little pin mone: Villa Hohenlohe, her residence at Baden. “The empress of Austria the palace during her recent visit_to Baden | as she contemplated buying a villa, and Baden- German empress took a look at it the other | day. Bot neither Empress Elizabeth oo Augusta is willing to agree to the queen’s priee, which is nearly twice as mueh as Property is generally thought to be worth. — - Affect Our Grain Market. St Louis Repidlican. England and Russia are bristling up at cach other azain, but the grain market has learned to endure these little demonstrations with placidity. — - On the Fence, Atlanta Gonstigution. We take pleasure in announcing that the second battle of Gettysburg, which has b going on for some time, isl confined entirely to paper, and the south s taking no part whatever in the affair i A Hint to the Postmuste Indinnapotis Journal. If the postmaster general would devote a little of his time to bottering the postal ser- viee as now erippled by the accession of thonsands of incompetent men, instead of trying to foree o special del theory into practiee, a long-sufferiig public will be very grateful. It Doesn't General — Persian Roses, Lappincott’s Mago In an ancient legend, Persians sty That a rose tree blooms at the gates of Day, And once in each life, be it sad or gay, Comes the scent of that lower from the far off skies, And the heart seem litted to Paradise, And, oh, the day that it came to me ‘Tears cannot tarnish the memoy Of that moment out on the sumn; When tie ance fell from Your eves were raised, and their tender talo Had made me forget the refreshening gale, Till the waves were dashing over the rail, And the clinging arns of @ razged cloud” Had wrapped the sun in an nky shroud. With the timbers straining under our feet, And our faces paie in the lightning glar We learned for the first time life was swee For wo learned for the first tine love w \cre s the fragrance that came on the Bright was the moment, but swittly past— A, far too blest, too hright to last | ot the Y s, pitiless sea Claimed w! a8 deare 1 life to me, Al merciless Memory. draw the veil Across the path of lh Nng way Shut from my eyes the loosened sail And 1ift my heart from that ocean gray -~ STATE AND TERRITORY, Nebraska Jottings. nd Island will surrendec w-aay without fiving a gun. The firs k building for Sidney under contract, It is w modest one nk Massie, of Tecumseh, man m the railvond coul sheds, on the shoulder by the revolving of the derrick and frightfuily injur . Ansen Hewity, a respeeted lady of i dove from u bridge into “the Elkhorn riv r, struck bottom and stayed there. She was thoroughly tired of life and a eancer attachment, A band of Pine Ridge Indians were in- duced to give unative “shindy” near a ohurch in Rushville last Sunday. The whoops and yells and *melt the flures’ of the reds produced a panic in the church and the congregation hastily ad- journed, Broken Bow was d duds last Friday to gr senger train to fown out of the stage coach wilderness s sends grectings via the route’’ to all the world he Rarus of Hebron belonging to Mr Gleason, bucked against toting a ringe at'a snail pace, and ran the ve Im~|.- over stone piles, and against trees hitehing posts. e sucoceded in sr ing the rig, and braising Mrs, Gle and her two children! Mr. J. Starmer and hi§ daughter Clara, narrowly cscaped a hovrible death in Hastings Saturday. 'They were driving m a buggy near the B, & M. depot. A switch engine with a car backed up, struck the buggy find overturned it, throwing the occupants to the ground and under the ears. l‘nrlumm‘ y the ears were stopped almost’ instantly, and Mr. Starmer and Clira were rescued un- mjured from the whepls: ked in holiday et the fivst pas- The town is now d “great Burlington Towa Itom The third street raibway is to be planted in Ottumwa. Dubugue has_abandoned the union depot project. The railroads did not take the bait, are eighty in Denison, The shipmen 25 cur loads. Ida Grove huving lost its grum eleva vators by fire, the people at once be Lo ereet & new structure o that it might not lose its trade. Idu Grove is nothing if not enterprising. A man by the name of Devol while dig- carloads of grain in nd no ear to ship it. for August wili be about ging a woll at Bloowticld was being owered when the rigeing gave way, let ting nim fall about twenty f He es- caped with a broken collar bone. A farmer living about two miles from Sioux Rapids, one very warm day re- cently, undertook to drive forty head of UESDAY, AUGUST 31, 1 hogs to that city, hed fifteen of died from the effec t shameful and dition of afa’ countypoor and snddenty | hfe conld be sustained and_poor madame died { you,1 know ll ¢ about the weed | supper she had participated in that nig — treme degrea of thinne no trath in them what on to know that she had farm for years, | not drank drank to excess I'he other has fo ind had some milk wwobable that it was very little iced | | milk in France L bonus of $20,000 every respect <on fiad had no wine that day “No, T do not think s | fortunate marris allowed her un ¢ 10 make her unhappy. The Firat, the Orlcinal and Only 1 who have a ity $500 a ye faculty of making wav for its voles best of things making her will upon a long journey, . in which she | ¢ fortune to Mr. f a whim thin anything else, g EIVO8 11118, cufta and ¢ 88 and beautiful polish ¥ knows, keepe the nd the last one she 1 A now Dakota town i quenthed the T Northwestern of the Rapin City school stounded nst week to find Fleteher wonld not take charge of the school for less than $150 I'hat settled i s now aegotiating for to marry her, and she respected of mines we At the time shemado her will in hers possibly more She willed me between them will in s favor, an even exchan, in jest than in Paton ted and soid 10 Can wenr same belt B vt ol Wl some time before her death that had o successful The new eity conneil has passed an ordinanee forbidding the of Buffalo 700 nad ST for pAmphiac . J. HORNE. INVFI'&! 81 WABASH Av.. flmnno. m getting ol opprobrious work of dressing a gre within the corporate lHmits t into consideratic Neilson was ver DOCTOR WHITTIER 617 St. Cha in- | 18y Lo dress, a prominent | o, the ordinance is apt to look 1t will most probably re tle premature an ordinance to dresses are y seldom ehangoed her look lovelier than she did She wore a simple lesSt., St. Louls, Mo. o Modioal Colleges, b white dress rming ns she steppe has filed articles of_incorporation. Nervous_ Prostration, Physical Woakness : Mercurial and other Affec- tions of Throat, Skin or Bon, old Sores and Ulcers, are & Succexs, on Tateat selentlne prin lpien, Satey. Priva Diseases Arising from Indiscretion, Excess, Of conrse | ) rone to a better world first forty miles of the | 8O bbb & Northern i i nre was The Pawnee Con Conventio wy shinments of eattle ¢ or Indulgence, which rotuce hoe of trt duby nee of the Bey 1 county convention wa wis nominated To-day the repub being made two NI (SPay aes, on i : Convaltationst o representative, Ll representative W yoming coal of the locomotives, been tried on some and pronounced by in needofa | yas she fs anxions to sell the | A Positivo Writte se. Medicluosentor. MARRIACE GUIDE, 200 PAOES, PINR PLATES, clegant eloth and m * county attorney. Inspected | constructed Iderman, John D wind was almost a tornado, and the | was hurled through the ai ms rose asif by magic; ors turrents the i convention nomination Bowers for superintendent of publie in- the -h-p!h of r, has beensuperimtendent tendered the The professor's work 1ssociation with our convineed everybody with whom he has come in contact, that he is thoroughly | fiablo-cure in the company have n filed with the sc id county cle |\ lYLu red at ny are Alexand W0 capital stock | » trustecs gr the | people, hing it dieal endors I (oftlce O by MLl e eix BWIATE ATERCY. 0. 174 Fulton Street. 2I,329,850 Tansill's Punch Cigars Tere shiped during tho prat without'n driime i of Chieyenne, and Bruno Richt of New York city, prineipal place of business. people would give him a he vty support, should b be RBidaing Alexander 2 Chicago Hearld. When in 1878 Disraeii Berlin with the island of Cy braska, if not in the s a Fire and Killed San Diego (C: 10 world oan trathe suoh i Ehowing, (deuler only) wanted in euch town. BOLD BY LEADING DRUCCISTS. R.W.TANSILL & CO.,55 State St. Chmnnc. | NN C. GREEN SLHODL OF SCIENCE 1d accomplished young ' on his lips, Bulgaris been a bone of contention vexed eastern que an antonomous and tributary prinei wdy of the hotel at Encinitas was constitut line.of the Ca locomotive It was order ty that it should have government Bulzaria had | destruction gunnysuck started for the fire. After a determined subdued and ti ved. On her way hack, i r a pile of railroad ties ing upon large 1 hidden from flm‘l “fourths of its pnpul umn, seant 1.\\0 5 and Astronomy ations Sopt. ith and B5uh, find other Informntion apply 10 the Collew WOODBRIDGE BRO'S,, State Agents DeckerBro'sPianos Omaha, Neb. DR. IMPEY. S0 FLARINNANM ST, NOSE AND' THROAT, “tax r:xrnn-r res on the people, and the in a continual condition of o Berlin gave its 1s of the people., tmmg the status of the plmt\pllll\ that the prince should be freely elected by the people and confirmed by the sublime porte with the consent of terr _;|.» out provinee w ppen nhmg stick, Miss Tallant gage the re) nd suceeeded in Killi , which measur luu(‘um to th cabin, & full mile from any i at home on and looking apparently nonw uum, who is a cousin of the reign- duke of Hesse, Alice, dauglite 1« brother of the \\Ilnm the Princess Beatrico fo married ! g y morning, I s fresh us « l]_il‘ worse for | Influences of De d Teeth on with equally a wing been quietly depr urious effect Sweden illustrates ually striking manner. Tho x.m.‘m v trouble with Sery the reign of El;E. Ean, Glagges fitted for all forms of defective Vision, Artificial Kyes luserted. houigh the surgeon, Dr. V pet the siightest population of have religions reasons_for pre Russia, and will I”“'vlp«fin unablo to def probably neyer nally @ dependenco considerable of the sultan been strongly expressed in Bulgar dental surgeon, rand lower g s completely | of them the uropean powe ty of Berlin which te remains of the mo minated the rn, and on the Plenty of work tor the eabinets of - rope wiil grow out of the present compli factories will cloventh day aft¢ th it had become quite sed fangs on the subsequently he duemrlu-d ing through all parchwcy of 'the ophtlialminic nstantinople, HOW NEILSON DIED. They Make a Denial, Messrs., O'Connor & Rufur, souri Paciiic, was mado in the Denial of the Story that Her Death ulted From a Reve nune-Republi with u very vered with durk hair set ulunflh pair of ~I|uul«h s \Vlll\mxl the inter- impression was ikeman, tes- o that Rufur, the b; tified that O'Connor, been drinking and that his breath smeled st hat he testified oddest of pale-blue ¢ with a short shoulder cay 5, a white mull kerchief, This is how she appo rh— hun dressos, PO THE TREATNENT OF i Chronic & Surgical Diseases, for two months now in employ e maid to the great N 3 4|llll|]i_\ figure he lwllrnm AI to u I;\, contury, and o s, Apparatus &nd romed tof every form of d *CRA OLERA; or DIARR| EVERYBOD{'I&SUBJECF 0 +(OM PL/\NTS GFIHSKINDe AP NO TAMILY 35 SAFE Winicdr HAVqu A BDTH.E OF ar correspond with us cnubles us (0 treat wany © ut seoing them FOR CIRCULAK on Deformitios and 3 q of the Bpine shows she 18 ou want 1o talk to me sont”’ sho said, because Tove he Bracos, Club nitis, Inhalatiol curicity, Paral r, Skin, Blood and hearted women who ever lived s, Inhalers, Braces, Trusses, and inot deseribe to you all kinds of Medical and Surgical Appliauc ufuctured and for ealo wlmhw wedigal Insttute making ¢ Nervous Diseases ALY, S AND BLOOD DISEASES, produced, siccessfully ¢ ave Syplilitie polson from the and never gave as 8o many ladies do. ally lhm"stlld not 20 10, 8ult i g |‘\‘L " All{fl\‘lm W restorative treatment for 1oss of v COMMUNICAT Were ) you with qu n chalet with only ber nearest fric RS SHAS : son died the 14th of August just six y see, it was Lhis way lun«_: been ill at times, situated in the blood vesscls, but she was quite well when she set_ out o drive with two or three umlmgh leave |.m- f:u Swit omo 1o get all hor journey, and VATE OIRCU 70 MEN TAL AND NERYOUS 1iauASES, 33, BFEUMATOLKI or send Listory of your case for iiuable to visit s may be troated NITHIN- FASY: REACH A IT-15-A-SAFE & SPEED? 62, CURE: o<me AUDRUGETSELID | press BECUI KLY ERVATION, no mark One personal futerview pre- Filty rooms for the secom. Board and attendsuce ak Address all Lettors to Omaha Medical and Surgical Institut Cor. 13th 5L and Capitol Ave. OMAHA, NEB. ED FROM OF contents or kender, was greatly late in the afternoon to uu!u Mume who was dying at the reaton of her death was vory ~\|n|h blood vessel whieh reasouable prices.

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