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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNfiAY AUGUST 19, 1888 -TWELVE PAGES. TheGREAT SALE! 20 Will continue one week longer. On account of many of our help being off for their holidays, we were quite unable last we to wait on all our customers, and have duuh d to continue one week more, to give all the same opportunity to get these goods at wholesale prices. Take ad- vantage of this opportunity. It is many years since we did anything like this before, and likely to be many years before we do it again, N. B. FALCONER. 3 I 1IN v s i ng his | disruption. The division of the empive | of them, cannot commit crime with im- < ,even to the sheathing of [ the workmen all rais ir hats s on the brow of a y givl just EHE RUSSL\ GOV ERNm‘ANT. oty are o concern for | into |Iu'o\'|||l'\~9 vuled directly by a ,L.\-- punity in one locality and then emi- > b {tself, and thus dismantied [ cheered her as talong. W oro it is concenled voil nljru- their welfare. I have known the pres- | ernor appointed by the tsar and a coun- | grate to another. Before getting the remnant of old *192” is left to its | the junkman did 3 't knowt ligious vocation. And yet-—so full is ent tsar,—Alexander [[I.—almost since | cil selected from among the people rcessary passport the an .l.-luu u: { It used to \['- <lmu of the Iur\lnx ;ml;t I; ||In|\o l\;.m likely l\u }1s again })m ;l:_mmu (lylllfl wn]]nln countenanco— _ | his infancy, and can assure you that he | thereof amounts to practical local self- | every applicant are ascertained, anc : .0 enginecrs of the | hard at work at some coal or iron mine | her lips still bore the traces of the im- Bs Virtuos as Viowed by & Na- | i BIRCS S0et dccomplished, liberal | government; and tho eroction of each | the good are distinguished from the bad | rond cast fond glances over at the yard | pulling away with creaking and weary | g 4 For s mbmant he ot tive. and enlightened monarchs that ever | of the many distinet nationalities into | and treated accordingly, Ve natur- | where it lies as they rush past on a | joints ata heavy load. The engine is ous artist’s hand upon an easel 428 upon & thrones & monarch who con- | separate provinces removes all danger | ally tho law-breakers and agitators re- | newer and finer locomotive, recalling | on the books of the English railrond de, struggling, perhaps, with Stantly studics the welfare of his peo- | of & clushing of interests such as would | gurd this as o hardship, but their fel- [ how that battored ruin was year commission us n remarkable instance of | the remnant of that passion which these ple; a monarch who is mild mannered, sure to result from any imperial par- | low citizens demand it as a safeguard | the champion of the track and env longevity in locomotives. Some years | saintly words had almost quelled. Then gentle and kind, and who_continually | li wry system. Another and by no | against the machinations of both. ~The | all. 70 information was asked from Amor- | taking his palette-knifo, as if ho dared strives to ascertain the needs of his sub- s advantage to be derived | fee dl.\xq_,\-d for the passportis made | Here is engine 179, with a portion of | ican railroads as to the life of the | not trust himself long enough to untie WMisrepresentations of Journalists and | jocte, and even now stands ready to | fr is s, is the gradual and C .' system, which is the cab still clinging to the boiler, but | American engine, the purpose being | the knots, he moved toward her chair, Travelers—The Emancipation of | adopt whatever system of government | healthy assimilation which is going sive. vegarded ns one | that is all that remains to show its for- | for comparison with English-made en= | The knife still in his grasp, he placed he Slaves—Popular Miscons would be most conducive to the welfare v forward, and which will surely e n{ revenue. mer use. It isa rec vival in the | gines, and it is on record that little his hand at her back, and, with the fer= 3 e of Russia. For these qualit s | result in breaking the tribal and rac “True, no compulsory educa- | graveyard of the engi ot the spar- | beat ‘em all. uor of a fasting love, Kissed her full on almost worshiped by the people, all ve- | barriers now operating to the disadvan- | tion in Russia, and no adequate provi- | rows find snug quarters ‘in the nooks carly days of the road it was | the soft, moist lips. **Ah,” said she, a8 ports to the contrary notwithstanding. | tage of the country. sion is made for the education of the | and crannies of the pipes, and have 8 v to ‘name the locomotives in- | with reluctant tenderness he loosed the Empire of the Tsar. “Russia is much larger in arca than | “The criminal law of Russia, of which | massesi but the facilities ~afforded | built their nests in the place where | * of “numbering them, and such | bonds to which he owed so great a hap- &K, Perry S. Heath, Tue Bee's | the United States, and ha popumtmu we hear so much unfavorable and ua- | ave fully as good as could be ex- | only ashort time 1 ring fup- | names as ‘“John Rogers” and “Betsy™ | piness, ‘‘how much my husband de- s LR okt SlinsnrI v bHe I nared do | just criticism, is nothing more than the | pected under the circumstances. Rus- | nace-fire and steam gavo lifo | Were the cognomens of famous enginos. | serves’ my gratitude, in that he has Washington correspondent, who made up of & groat many d code of poleon, with a few minor s a new nation, comparativ and s o s of metal, A | Recollections of *“Betsy™ ave still the | chosen a friend so worthy of my es- '© | tribes, speaking as many languages, | changes. The charge that the admin- sxwmi[m She is not up to the ago alf-dozen other ruins, in the process of | basis for manya yarn among the old | teem and of his! - Nothing is more de- press of the Lorborn company, Balti- | differing in habits, religion and modes | istration of the criminal law is harsh | educational matters, but is constantly | greater or less decay, lie about the | engineers. ‘Betsy” hauled the conch | lightful than to count among ono'a more, 1 hook under the title “A Hoosier | of life, and in many cases having been | and tyrannical is a libel on the judi- | striving to that end; and even now e it and the ground is strewn with | in whicn ANM!'HF L_\;wulu first paid a | ac filmlnl‘mu‘t'flnmuu at once so subtle T Ruseio which deals wifh the Rus- | enemies long ngo. = Anyone uequainted | ciary of the empire, which hus been the | ery young mau, be he rich ov poor, en | the odds and ends of many more. Itis [ Visit to C hmufnntvl n-n""n"\{ s | aud foreible as you—a mun who knows A i e i Si- | with the history of its rapid rise and | first of the great nations to abolish the be educated at the public expense by | the Golgotha of the track, a sepulcher | president, and both tJohn Roge how to spare a woman of propriety that sian cmpire, ts people, mihilism, Si- | S0 L8 RN UG owledgo that | death penalty. There is no capital pun- | making application to the local repre- | where time spreads the pall of oblivien | *Betay afterward did service for tho | romorso which is the worst of agonien, beria und the exile system, and other | ¢ "Romanoff dynasty has built substan- ment in Russia, except in aggravated | sentative ot the gover: according | over man’s handiwok and makes it | government of Lincoln by bringing up f Thanks to your ingenious brutality,.I features of the empire of the only white | tiaily and solidly with d organiz 1 | cases of high treason, such as attempts | to custom. Iree education i v | naught. from the .\lviuth m:\n% a rebel to C amp | have no sh in the fault into which tsar, which will undoubtedly attract | discordant matérial, carrying on the life of the czar, But the im- | departure. It originated in the we rage of one engme & month Douglas. Neither of the engines is considerable attention. One of the | ple forward from the primitive to th artiality with which the law is en- | and is moving, eastward, We know 3 yard, but this | dead yet. The “"“‘;"“ -;"““ ',‘I"‘j and o Do dod return to my ohapters is @ defense of nihilism by | condition to-day. And allthis has boen | forced is proverbial. . Prince and peas- thut for many yetws after the American | by no means implies that all that go L L L AL LI U R S LU e gEat oy » world-re- | 8ccomplished under the present form of ant are equally punished for equal of- | war of the rebelljon the educational sys- | there are entirely u . The rail- | @ work pumping up water at some | a kiss with o conscience” void of ros Sergius M. Stepnink, the world-re- | LEOR IR Uy B 018 Phih 5 fenses: and the rigor with which the | tem of the southern states was de- | road may have done with them, but_if [ of the way stations on the road. proach.” Which scems to be most effective now | former are handled for transgres plorably defective and inadequates | the boiler can be made sfviceable with P a— CHUT CENGRIoE chapter upholding Russia’s present | and upon which the deavor to jus- | against the law is a matter of hmur\. and even at this day some of | 4 Jittle patching, it is speedily bought Her Defenseless Lips. CES. form of government, her refusal to odu- | tify their dustardly attempts upon the | W are told in glowing language ) the states muke but fecble attempis to | up by a contractor, or even w junk | San Francisco Argonaut: When tho cato hor subjects, the remarkable spy | 1ife of the emperor, is his refusal to es- | that free speech and a fres press are | Provide froc equsation, Of course the | dealer who chance for profit, and and passport systoms, and the system of | tblish o constitutional government. | myths in Russia; but we are seldom told liberation of the slaves was the reason. | the engine that has perhaps done dut el m ! Americans may look upon such a de- | the true reason why. We are not told | Therefore, before critizising the Rus-| for twenty years is made useful fo JATTER DAY mANTY cuspnL exile to Siberia. The chapter was fur- R PERRY S. HEATH'S COMING BOOK. ceptions of the Tsar. & tour of Russia last summer, has in the nownod nihilist. This is followed by a cnusTiA, last knot was tied and she was hound to | Fint; apitol avenue and ‘Mwontioth stroet.— h A, Murtin, pastor. Services at 10:45 8. m and the chair by the gentle instance of some mand as most " reasonablic; but if they | that wmong an excitable and warlike | Sitn educational system, it is but fair t0 | dozen more” after the railroad has dis hult ilozon sk porayitay she' palds Gl m’n'{‘.!?.'.‘.;'i‘.}h”&’i‘:{nf nished by Count Charles de Arnaud, a | understand the situation and look at it | people,such as ave many of the Russians | Locall the rr‘“‘" that she 18 d ded it Boneishetyol haye nosholasm ind el | ees teenth A " anative Russian, who ipated in | from the standpoint of a patriotic Rus- | who rétain much of their old turbulent M0.000 of recently liberated serf, The life of a locomotive depends very | 30od the indulgenco I have shown vou | edicly ...u“..'l.SS"..uG"‘lm.‘.u“'x,u‘Xu.",‘.‘c' i R e a v thiCane si will readily see their mistake. | spivit, the free press and free speech of *The utter ludicrousness of Stepniak’s as to suppose that I will actually permit - L SN G R e ,"is mo demand among the | dsmagogues and. anarchiste would pro- | SYtempt to pose ae the spokesman of tho you to kiss me. - With an eloguenco of | =~ "0 ’l‘n‘i:;?::::m-ndcn- At % Gl s : ssof the Russian people for | duce ‘ehuos and bloody revolution. in Russian peogls, jpeads just a passing which T had not, I confoss, thought you | gafes "dervices 120w, ti aad ¢ p. . Suadhy sioal relations of Countde Arnaud with the Suppose & constit | which thero would. be 1o sfuty for ife comment. Bakoinin and Krapotkine puble, you have depicted the happi- | 35.m - R ety i gitinbd bk G ) orig e P 5 %h I s confer vou i Mission services day at 7:0 t the w logation in Washington, and | tional government had been established | or property. Eve e | the “"‘ ”‘"l'“‘ ! "'f"_“‘l““ '.“:‘.] ,but few now turncd out of the | % whi “‘_ I should confer N s i ] qonee o Mo Soh Epomctok. o, Sonu Willumart™ the remarkably logical grounds taken | before the liberation of the serfs. Could | is a limit to free speec! K analtien press, | ismwhos i aReALats ot lis *h that age, because the nec allowed you to tie me to this chuir 3 ron!u d) 813 Narth, Nineteentiy in defonso of the Russian system, it is | the much-lamented Aloxander IL., with | as was shown in the conviction and ex- {\‘“"3 the Swiss Republi. and Krapot- | Sty for speed in manufucture and tho | 49 disablgynehihinklivould mokimroy ¢ adep e b et believed that the chupter was inspired | & stroke of his pen, have been able to | ecution of the anarchists in Chicago, | TI0E F45 jmpetionediinilirencodoracyog for engines do not allow the | FOUr wresting from my defensc t. Harnabas Free, Ninetoenth and California—Rey, s g Faant ,,.‘ 26,000,000 of them? When we re- | and the imprisonment ot Herr Most in | Cating the form of government they de- e tobo apont that formerly | that kiss which T am’ not, alas! at 1ib- | Johi Willlums, ldtn celgbrution it 7:4) & m.; ehoral by if not written at the Russian le e et (AN G IS AMNT600 MenYIOlE LoER ML sire in Russia. Then the theories and : pentthe Y | orty to give you. Penetrated by tho | Siebrationatit:®a. m.;flanday school at v:& 8. my 1l how much blood and treasure were | the city of New York. The aim of the 1p the locomotive. As i Val0 EVOLY! 4 Y Chioral eveulng song at tion. It is, probably, the strongest de- (-\]n'u\lml to secure the freedom of only | Russian element is to curb this element; doctrines which Stepniuk would promul- § g of fact, the lnuvu\nl made | frdor of your prayers and inpre sed by Al AEE) Shurchyicormer fenso over made of the Russian form of [ 4,000,000 of people in the United | and it goes without saying that it is jus- | £ate haye boeen condomuoed by tho tri- | ety y : gotvics ond| Ll (sUbLORGDN YORLIERRDE.nE L CORs oty um..m.m,.W..{.‘:“.‘,.“arh undiy i government, nnd is in part as follows: | States, we can form some idea of what | tified in taking & hundredfold more | Dutials of both tho republics last wimeds | many ' rai i, where th ne pur- | Bented to submit o this duress; but you At B e “Much of the information obtained | the undertaking would have been | vigorous measures than Yk in | s dangerous to socicty and the sceurity | (it doren s ago islaid up or | MUst not forget that it was upon tho ox- nt oy Commnion) ‘and Sormon s 11 by Joutnutists, travelors and casual stu- | 0 Jussia, Then, ‘instead of only | America, Generally the seed of dem- of lite and proper put to serap. This is due solely to the | Pressed condition that you should con- Erory Fri A e i Tt 1 wholly mislond- | a south, like we had, slavery extended | agogy fails by the wayside or is dropped e S L L superior workmanship and the material | fent yourself with seeing mo in this fng. Iuiling to understand” the lan- | over the whole empire, and the parlia- | upon rocks in_this ic, whero it WhatiBeogmesig/tiocomatives, guage., habits and peculiarities of the ment would have been fully mnmn'lml withers and die b it finds Globe Democrat: Few people have W Batives, they obtain their facts from so- | DY the stave-owners. The aristo far more congenial climate and fruitful | any idea of what becomes of thd rashly l:l\fuw"l_ \\lflh:mu: "1(":1["'1'-“‘ (bl et ing lvm‘\;;;;ll-,;:;‘;wrw ouriers who have no sympathy with or | 4nd landed proprietors would have been | s railroad locomotive after it has passec ! of miles per day, at an ay 3|58 D e L s | ourn ots wha havo no sympathy With O | mastors of the situation without fear of | I insist that the Russian systemof | its years of usefulness. Where | specd of twenty-five or thirty miles an : eios me with fhe ling d ors who have taken up their residence | interference, and they would have | panishment to Siberia is far more hu- | gre R : hour, does not” sust arly so much imaginationfonly, Dl ot ) ta 1 ¥ paiiflan ol | IIREIOEaROR I AR AT e L are they buried is often usked, | hour, docs not sustain nearly sc he. “But 1 am very sevc it 17w Tsead of moruing there and are as unappreciative and e n mane than the English method of dis- | and nond but the railroad man ean d tear to and ma- ey bl Sl iranigors Always woldome. AR TR VR ool { be freed. This great act of the so-called G O o il S S o A s And © have prejudiced as themselves; from the fow | b fres : 5 ng of political prisoners. "How | guswer. The great locomotive works ; 1 made an’ enormous con- BAPTISZ. natives known to the world as nihilists, | despotic government of Russia ought to y Irishmen have languished and | of the country are busy day and night | ain at the 'unq...mn ely slow | o B e o i Immangel Baptist churob, formerly North Omaba who get their iuspiration f BAkony outweigh nearly all t sharges, true St A LA 1 the 'y ¢ 5Y nig S Tata it BV TR AT P cession. I know low much you | missiop, 3 Saunders street -Serviees Sunday morns ge spiration from Bakou: & o 3 y < 1 health and | tryving to supply the demands made e of fifteen es an hou e love me, and I appreciate the fe ing at 10:3), und evening at 7:4. Sunday school &t nin,Krapotkine and other disciples, und | 8nd untrue, made by its enemies. spirit in English prison dungeons? and | upon them nml yet they are not equal | i3 ten times as much on every y emotions \\vlux(-lnl}vllo;v in_your e from still other sources which are more | !‘But there ave several other unass: yot we hourd no outery against Eng- | {6 tho task, so rapidly tve railroads ba- | the freight engine as it is on the passen- | freTok BRSO (W SOUL OVCR To | samimiad Siorine ol Setmog: Midhy sokioolos R e e s ble objections to a Russian parlinment. | land. The situation in Russia to-day | ing construc i ger engine, And thisis what tells on Py pial s O e 4 in.t succe \ A I T ing constructed in every state in the 2 : ! @ been enabled to look _your heart into tul in their aims to array the Knglish- Such a body, which must include | is certainly preferable to that created | union. The time consumed in building | the life of the machine, The Mlinois | hine 1 deprived of my fan, my % b Eaptiats meas b ::"-.5:;‘. elm:: Hwfl*\mn people of the "world against | representatives of ull the classcs, croeds | by English coercion in Ireland. -~ one of these iron monsters hus been re- Central hus an _engine in servic handkerchief—of all the intrenchments : ¥ ussin by constantly erying opprossion | #nd nation , would be a Babel of | “The passport system, which is said | duced to a minimum, and some of the [ for it in 1858, and some of the old car- | hohind which a woman rotreats when mnd despotsm. I refer to kngland, | confusion and a Bedlam of conflict- | to be so obnoxious to American and | works are able to turn out an engine | Casses in the graveyard can look ba she can no longer sustain, unprotected English diplomacy and the English | ing interests: Tmagine a parlisment- | Buropean merchants and tourists, is | complete in every particular every | Over only half the number of year N 5 . much on the workmanship put into it construction and the class of work it performs, A first-class passenger en- P eeviEhonla b gooa tor twanty-hve < s positi e (. A 3 enth i enuo—~ used. Much depends, also, on the class | Kissible position, and should not attempt | Yo, Lo b i i S of work required of an engine. The pas- o8 o | o vl U o rayar ia locomotive, which mal uming -Rev. A. W. L unduy school at: 4 2 e P i H. L. Ho :e ross. They are evidently moved by | 8ry body composed of Poles, Germans, | yeallyan absolute necessity asan agency | twenty-four hours. They must pass | They were larger and finer to see and e rhaseaces e i, S G ealousy of the growing power and ap- | Cossncks, Tartars, ~Mohammedans, | for the suppressien of o Ao idly. 5 ke had lots of modern improvements, but Sl i h Sute Y | strects—Hegulur's hday m 2 p p- | € : nmeda pp! vime. The po- | away rapidly, and what becomes of v not less active than mine—and I confess roaching supremacy of Russia in the | Greek Catholics, ~Roman Catholics, | lico and detective systems have not at- m you ask reporier “hi- | the boiler was the vital point and gave ou V t “Norths Omahe, U S p g y 3 s Y ave not at: s A reporter of the Chi ¥ to you that I can almost feel your kiss | North Omahs. 208 Saundors—Rev. K. political affairs of the old world. Turkomans, Jews. Copts, and scores of | tainod anything 1ikb th porfoction’ en- | cago Timos mado a tour through tho | out beforo the little sSer felt the pangs | I\ f oG uiver, my henrt is beating in | Soiyiess o and svenine. Suntsy school o “The United States has been my home | other Wholly dissimilar ‘races and na- | joved in America and elsewhere, while | scrap-iron yard of the Illinois Central | Of 8ge. St bR e e Tor over thirty years: T am an ardent | tionalities, bitterly opposed. “antago- 1 the demand for them is much greater. | railrond, and all about, bleaching and | - The company sold an enzine theothor | [ to” understand that you 10 Chapet TR ke o dmirer of its constitution and laws,and | vistic to each other. Could such a | The wonderful skill by which the | falling away from the influcnces of the | day that had ' better record even than | none of these delicious pains?” g i 1 IR AT ERICRR [l 5 Ydid my share towards keeping the legislate for n great empire like | names and careers of criminals are all [ winds and storms of winter, were the nnn gine No. 23 was built in 1857, [ More—hut—" said he. ~'nm you can- | on HiaCush (onsTes: states united by service in the war of | Russin? Would the same logislation | pocorded and their movements watched | bones and carcasses of these mighty used continuously up to a few | not prevail npon me t ge tho lati- | Earvicesat0s. i snds f the rebellion. -~ Yet with all my love of | answer for the Tartar and Pole, for the | is almost ucknown in Russin, Every | dead. This was the burying-ground | w ugo, when it went 10 the grave |4wde T have slread -Uv?\'v‘.{'“g‘ 5 A | o R . it cordiaty (ivad: theliberty inculcated into me’ by this | Mohammedan and the Roman Catholic? | town and hamlet is not conuected with | for the great locomotives of the country, | ¥: baburied, howaver. © Tho | thas my Kindness was perhaps, mistaken, | ittt ATINe: % Narys apd, Taeuir expericnce I fuil to sce any necessity | 1 believe not: and Tam confident that | jts neighbors and with the great cities | the huge engines that have served out | company veally had a sort of senti- R lll!\"\mnwi"w:ll' SVenlag: Bunasy schootasoon: o 0 for o change in the Russian form of gove | constitutional government is not wanted | by electric curronts, as is the ease here, | their term of life montal affection for the' fAIthiul ol | T inaerars e oS HEHe tank Tieveall B T Ningteonth and Davenport—TRoy. ernment. 1t is thoroughly adapted to | in Russia excopt by a few idle drcamers | Ty ‘tho systematic ‘use of all these ad- | They have a history, though, these | worker, and meant to keep it housed as | But it h Y commisarato (oun Iaaungs. |k Sy Tt menin ot syl the wants of the people. Under it they | and enthusiasts. vantages America and other equally | dead and rusty me g e lintis A ava e haatallitial| Cuviiihaene.wayeibeRH I DI SARES t | e e e O have attained ahigh degree of civil- | “Tt will roquire very many years to | favored nations arve enabled o maintain | this old carcass of engine 192, ove is | placard announcing some of the inter- | frailty of my contemporar 1€ you | Hol,dervites morslus end gvening: Busdag aiosk dzation, power and prosperity. Both | educate the Itussians up to the proper | law and order and the security of life | nothing left now but the boiler,and that i svents in its caveer. but a specu- | knew what a compensation one finds in h l!unxeuu\ Mission, the government and the people hold the | appreciation of constitutional govern- | and property without resort to the re- | is falling apart with the action of rust— junkman happencd along and | the consciousness of rectitude—if you . e Tupens sebon b United States in high esteem, so that it | ment, even at the rapid rate of progress measures needed in Russi. | the mero skeleton of what was ouce n | saw how he could turn an honest penny | knew how sweet i hen T'v iy e iV 18 not unreasonuble to nsk that Ameri- | made under the Romanoff dynasty substitute for these ad- | mighty fo The w Y ; m an honost penny | knew how swoot it is to me whon [ve- | _chorg mut cenit pat; sdiion-ray : : 4 % Yomi asty. substitute so nd- e wood work of the He made an offer for if, | turn from my clandestine, but innocent, Hervices moraing and evening. | Sand cans do not hastily judge them by the | Anduntil thiseducation l-l'\\'rnmplxshml vantages is the passportsystem, and it is i s as long ago been torn pted. and so one day to the studios of my vassals to » g vaporings of theie alautias, whodthough! | centralization of powsr'is i1 the hands | not only. & necusslty: bus is demanded d iving-wheel and the | the brave engino pulled out from the | realize that my o siill my hus- | moriag End evening. Bunday scnooy at soone o netuated by different motives, all aim to | of the tsar and his counselors; and the | by the educated and law-abiding people | rods and b » brass and steel trim- where she had sojourned for Her voice was Chapel, Sixtoontn and Mickory ~itev. My tojurc Russia in the estimation of travel- | judicious exercise of the same is the { of the empire ns a means of self-preser- | ings, the bell and smoke-stack, the | thirty-one years and went away down 's, tears of resignation. Her | %W hnk: Sundsyschool atd ocloek, Brs by appeals to sentiment merely, in | only governmental system capable of | vation. Under its operation a thief or | truck-wheels, and the all that went to | the familiar road for the last time, and | face shone \nlh"lu‘ glotined sadness 1 which the tsar is pictured asa savage | saving Russia from dismemberment and | law-braker of any description, or band | muke the complete engine have been ) the old engineers and the helpers and proud abnegation which one often Co];ne all'ound and don’t delay, and get the cheapest goods ever offered in this city. At this sale you can entire st&)ck at 5(])00 on th(;_ dollar. Just thmk of it, everything cut in '2. We invite every one to Men's Suits, 5 ~ $30 now $15.00 [ Men's Chinchilla Overcoats, - $30.00, now $15.00 | Men's Cassimere Pants, $9.00 now $4.50 [ Children’s Suits, $8.00 now $4.00 Men's Suits, 25 “ 12,50 | Men's Chinchilla Overcoats, - 25.00, 12,50 L 8.00 4.00 7.00 3,50 Men's Suits, 20 “ 1000 | Men's Satin Lined Overcoats, - 30.00, 15.00 “ 7.00 3.50 6.00 3.00 Men's Su[ts, 10 7.50 | Men's “ “ 25.00, 12.50 “ 6.00 3.00 5.00 2,50 Men's Suits, 10 500 | Men's Chinchilla Overcoats, 12.00, 6.00 L] 5.00 2,50 4,00 2.00 e . 0 i 3 Mep's Suits, 8 4.00 | Men's Kersey Overcoats, - - 8.50, 4.25 “ - 3.00 1.50 2,00 1.00 Everything is selling off fast at this great sale; at 1316 FARNAM STREET One Price Only : ne Price Only. A. POLACK, Manag ~ , ddanager,