Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, February 9, 1890, Page 14

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THE IMPORTANT TO SHOE BUYERS Owing to the great rush during the past few days wé’ were unable to wait upon many customers, and have concluded to continue the Public Benefit Sale for another week. OMA}{A DAILY BE Infants’ Ghildren’s&Misses’Dept RUBBERS, RUBBERS, Ladies', Miss Children’s Rubbers.... 16¢ Men’s Rubbers, izes vees ‘ 30e Infunts’ Turned Button 8hoes, worth 40e. .. <18 Infants’ Kid and Goat Shoces, worth ¢ 48¢ Child’s Kid Spring Heel Shoes, 8 to 7, worth 65c B8¢ Child’s Kid spring TTecl Shoes, 8 to 7, worth 9Cc. Ghe C'hild’s Pebble Button Shoes, tipped, 8 to 104, worth ‘H at 8¢ Child’s Goat and Dongola Shoes, Spring Heel, Rochester x worth #1.25....., . .at 90c Pebble Button Shoes, 11 to 2, .t I8¢ s Goat, Spring Heel, worth f at §1.18 1and Gout Button,leynolds Bros.’ and D. Cox's make, good value at §2,50; our prico during this sale. W $1.45 Ma ke Comparisons, WHEN THE FOLLOWING PRICES WILL PREVAIL: - = : Ladies Depanmem % E: SUNDAY, KEBRT TARY 9, » ISS)U--SIXTEIC,\' PAGES, » Men's and Buys Departmen Ladies' Dongola Button, patent leather tipped, \u-nh 82 Men’s Working Shoes, solid leather, worth $1.25 ot § Lnaios' Gontine Hand Turned button, worth # Men's Working Shoes, custom made, worth $1.¢ at Ladies’ Glove Calf and Pebble button. worth +L, 5. Men's Working Shoes, New York cily make, worth ..t Ladies’ Dongola. button, abeauty, worth $3 CHVSYET AT VeLelNeuN Men’s Working Shoes, Milwaukee oil grain, worth Ladies’ Fine Hand Turned, button, New York city make, worth $4.. .. Men's B3 Calf Seamless Congress, worth $1.75 Ladies’ Genuine French Kid.button.ReynoldsBros. ‘ox’scelebrated Men’s A Calf Seamless, congress and bals, worth $2. makes, worth $5; our price during this sale only Positively Men’s Genuine Calf, seamless, congress and bals, wor but one pair to each purchaser. Men's Genuine Welt Shoes, congress and bals, worth Ladies’ Fine Toilet Slippers, beaded front with satin beaded bow, worth Men's Calt Pegged Boots, worth $3..... ...... * £1.50; during this sale at 8§ cents, * Boys’ BCalf, scamless button, 11 to 24, worth 1. Boys™ B Calf, seamless button, 3 to 53, \wnh #2, NIRKKT A bottle of Shue Polish given away with every pair of Ladies’ Shoes purchased. 25 Per Cent Discount on All Fine Shoes. Make Comparisons. Boys’ Dress Kip Boots Boys’ milwaukee Oil Boys’ Custom Maae Store Ope 11 to 13, worth nin Boots, 1to 5, worth & { Boots, 1 to 3, worth & t Your attendance solic Ilml Make Comparisons. e A T T BT T ) . . 3 e, A . T 3 3 T B R W AT L R T T e . . e P37 8, e 3 W e R "+ T ——————r %\ SRR TR WSS 0 Please bear in mind that we are not quoting prices on inferior makes,but reliable goods which we will guarantee to give perfect satisfaction ZUNDER & HARRIS, 1520 Douglas Street. (maha's Lowest Price Reliable Shoc Store SOME NOTED HOUSE LEADERS Ex-Speaker Carlisle and His Very Unassuming Manners. HIS COURTESY TO A NEGRO GIRL. How the Silver - Tongued Brecken- ridge Talks His Speeches Into a Graphophone—Bold Ben Butterworth, The Opposing Warriors, [ Copyright 1690, by Frank @. Carpenter.) WasHINGTON, Feb. 6.—[Special to Tug Brr.|—The present congressional session is going to be one of fighting from the word go. Both democrats and republicans have dipped their tongues in ofl of vitriol and the acrimonious remarks of the past weck aro but the beginning of & poisonous stream of cloquence which will burn, not only the hearts of their opponents, but whici will stir the souls of both parties throughout the country. “The men are ripe for the occasion. There have never been more noted leaders fn both houses of congress than there are now, and the house has a dozen brainy statesmen who are ready for the fray and ad that itis on. 1 wok a look at John G. Carlisle today. He looks almost as young as he did when he was elected speaker six N 8 A0 His shoulders have become slightly stooped, 1t is true, and the bald spot on his crown has widened, but his blue cyes are full of firc and the iron of his blood has not weakened by his unremitting industry. Carlisle is one of the hardest workers in public life. He leaves his accomplished, Juno-like wife to keep up the society end of his Washington life, and he delves in figures and facts as though he were a young lawyer of twenty-five with his reputa- tion ‘to make. John G. Carlisle s six feet tall. Of slender form, he has a strong, rough, honest face, His fore- head is high and broad,bis complexion is sal- low, his eyes hight gray and his checks are thin, He dresses in statemen’s black, wears & doublebreasted frock and ties with his own hands the black string necktio around his standing collar, I would not call him a handsone man, but he would be a striking ove anywhere. On the floor he speaks with few gestures nnd his voice is a hard metallic on e, becoming at times aimost nasal, His forte is in his wonderful command of fact and statistics. He remcmbers everything thut he has ever read and ho seems to have read everything. He makes no tuss in his speaking, does not talk to the galleries and is the most unassuming man in Washington. 1 rode down with bim from the capitol one day in u strect car snd when we reached tho avenue a young negro girl entered the ear, “There was 1o seat for her and she grasped the strap as she looked up and down the venches on both s was surprised to sce Speaker Carhisle, for he was then speaker of the house, half rise to give her his place. A moment luter he saw that ho could make room for her beside him and ha crowded 'thic rest of us up aguinst the ord an, MOTIONED HER TO SIT DOWN, His treatment of eve: one else is on the sume democratic basis,” His latehstring is out to everybody and any one who wants to see him can see him at any time. He lives very nicely here at Washington and his brick house on K" street is one of the most at- tractive ones at tho cavital. He is fortunate in having a wife who knows how to take care of bim and Mrs, Carlisle watchies over his health as carefully as though he was her son instead of her husband. Carlislo 18 the embodiment of the free trade idoa and the same may be said of W. C, P, Breckenridge, who, in connection with McCreary, makes the Kentucky aelezation one of the strongest from the south, Hreck- enridge is known as thoe silver-tongued ora- tor in his own state. He is an eloquent speaker, is 8 man of fine culture and he de- lights in well-rounded sentences. He weighs & third as much again as Carlisle, though he 18 not as tall, and he is one of the fine-look- ing men of tho house, His hair is frosted silver, his beard is as white as newly slaked lime and his checks are as rosy as the rising moon, He is a noted lawyer and was a pro fessor in the university of Louisville before he camo to congress. Mauy of his speeches are extempore ones and he has shown himself to be a good all-around fighter. He is as good a fellow as he is a statesman, and he lives in avery nice brick house here about two miles from the capitol, on Six- téenth street, in the shadow of ex-Senator Henderson’s $100,000 brown stone chateau, Kreckenridge has a curious way of prepar- Mig his speech He dictates the matter to the graphophone and then has the cylinders writen out in type-writing. He did for a long time dictato his mail directly to the type- writer, and he is one of the men who can get through a great doal of work in a very short time. Representative Breckenridge's cousin, Breckenriage of Arkansas, 1s also prominent in the demoderatic “mrtyA 'Ho is the mon of Jonn C. Breckenridge, and he moves about the house looking as thouxh bhe wanted to fight and was ready to take up one at a mo- ment's notice. He s a lean little anatomy with a sallow face aud a heavy jaw. He pos. 8 considerablo ability aud has shown elf an able speaker. McCroary of (culuck). speaker, though “he is ulso a good nhus not as yet shown himself to possess the eloquence of Breck- enridge or the facts of Carlisle. He is a straight, well-padded brusette of medium beight, with a pair of eyes A8 BLACK AS OILED JET, with a broad full forehead and with raven black bair, He dresses well, 18 perfectly at home upon the floor and his speeches show him to be sowethivg of a student. He is Ml. y-two years old, is a practising lawyer was speaker of the Kentucky house and u\crl\or of the state before hie was elected cougress, He is & long speaker, but his speeches are of by no means the length a8 that which he sccused the late Sam Cox of mak- ing. McCreary says that when he left col- lege twenty odd years ago he made a visit to )\cw York, and { passing through Wash- ton be speut 8 few moments in the house .‘flnry. Hs saw a little man in tbe midale nf the floor and pounding the air very vigor- ly while ho kept the bouse in s storm of lnugmor He asked who this was, and was told that it was Sam Cox. He was not able to wait for the ena of tho speech, and went on to New York and then back to Kentucky. He did not again come to Washington until he was elected to congress, and through some troubles in his family he was not uble to get to the house onthe first day of the session, When he aid enter it hesaw the same hittle man standing 1n the same place and pounding tho air i the same way. It was Sunsct Cox rounding up one of the last speeches of his three decades of federal legislation. Me- Creary in talking to Cox about the matter sald that he liked the beginning of the speech and he very much admired the end of 1t and it would be his lifelong regret that he had never heard the middie of it. Ohio compares with Kentucky in this con gress as to the number of its able represen- tatives. However tho ABLE OHIOANS AKE REPUBLICANS, Ben Butterworth, Major McKinley and Charley Grosvenor size up well with Car- lisle, Breckenridge and McCreary, McKin- Jey is the embodiment of the protective tarift idea, He is an uble speuker, and this side of the tariff has been his study for years. He is careful in the preparation of his spesches, does not believe in speaking unless he has something to say, avd makes a hit nearly every time. McKin s a good politician and he might almost ‘be called a statesmen, His act at Chicago in stating that he was a friend of Joun Sherman’s, and that he wanted no one among his friends to vote for him a8 a presidential candidate, was an heroic one and added to_his fame. He may yeu bo president of the United States, and if , he will make an cminently respectable president. He is cautious and conservative, full of dignity, and he has the bearing ot a great man, He never makes a mistake and he has the sense to keep his mouth shut at the right time. He comes from the central part of Ohio, is weli-to-do, und, though he is not s money-maker, s income is by no means small. He made one of the ablest of tho republicau speeches in last week’s quar- rel, and he may be called the republican leader on tho floor. One of the best fighters m congress and the man who is always ready to throw off his coat and jump into the muss is Ben Butterworth. He is a bluff, good-natured fellow who reminds one of a jolly sea cap- tain, always ready to sing a song, tella story or knock down the man who insults bim. Butterworth always calls a spade o spade, and if he has a personaiity to utter he does not hesitate to LET IT FLY. He has none of the Quaker instincts of his father and mother, who were noted aboli- tionists and who were members of the Society of Friends. During Ben’s first po- litical campaign he was as much of a fighter as he is now and his father saw fit to give him a bit of advice, which be did iu writing, as follows: “‘My Dear Benny: Thy mother and myself have thought well to give thee some advice touching the conduct of thy campaign. We say to thee that we deem it better for thee to deal soverely with bad principles and bad practices thau to deal severely with bad men now living whom might be angered and do thee harm, Very affectionate! Ylay FATHER. At latest occounts, however, Butterworth has not taken this advice. He is & brave man as well as an eloquont one, and the fear of parm from the men on tho other side of the house docs not affect his speeches. He 18 oue of the fastest talkers in the house and he rattles out the dictionary atthe rate of 200 words a minute when he grows excited. When he talks no talks all over and there is not an atom in the 200 pounds which male up his anatomy wiich does not move when he takes the floor, He is as good an after- dinner talker as he is a poiitical debater,and there is no man iu congress who can sing “I'm & dandy copper of tho Broadway squad” as well as Ben Butterworth of Ohio. 1 have myself heard him siog this song ten times according to the uumber of notches cut into a stick and every time thatthe Grid- iron club meets and Butterworth is invited which he is nearly always he is made to sing. He lives very vicely here at Washingtou, owns & house worth about $10,000 and has a pleasant family, He 1s I am told tired of congressional life and like many of his fellow statesmen of more than ordinary legal abil- ity he anxious to leave congress and go back 10 the 1aw where he can make money as well as reputation, General Charles Grosvenor is ANOTHER GOOD PIGNTER, He has been fighting all his life and when his mother taught him his first prayer I doubt not that he kicked against its wording before he accepted it. Grosvenor comes from Athens, O., and for the past generation during which he has becu a politician there the republican varty has beon divided into factions and Grosvenor has been the fighter at the head of ono of them. He has suc- ceeded in downing his opponents and he can now stay in congress as long as he will. He 18 a tall, white haired, gray bearded man with eyes of the famed blue of the Sevres china, and with a tongue that can beat that of one of these porcelain fizures whose head moves on & pivot and whose tongue goes in snd out all day long. Grosve nor is a gooa speaker. He is a little too quick and jumps to his feet now and then when he had better remain in his chalr. He 1s, however, always ready to say something and he very often says it very well. He ranked as one of the red-heads of the house when he first came here about four years ago aud, though his hair is now white, his heart action is good and his joints are well oiled, He is only fifty-seven years of age, and he was born in Convectivut in 1 s father carried him out to Ohio a: squawling baby und be was rocked iu & sugar trough iostead of a oradle. He went to school in a log school house, did his first reading by the light of an old-fashioned log fire aud pounded away until he had got an extraordinary nmount of facts stored in the gray matter of his brain under that snow- white thatch of silvery bair. He has been a soldier, a speaker of the Obio legislature and divers odd’ other things before he became a congressman und he now has the seat of Sil- ver Dollar Waruer, Joe Cannon tells me that be is tired of covgressional life, and be thinks he would have veen petter off if he had stayed out of congress and stuck to moneymaking. He is an able speaker nevertheless, ana he will be heard from @ number of times within the next few weeks, Cannon is perpetusl mo- tion personified when he makes a speech. He tears the air, pounds his desk, sud needs about twenty square feot to move around in, He grows red in the face and throws his fingers at Roger Q. Mills while he howls out deflance and logio in strong nasal ones, BSpeaking of Mill OF A VIGURE this session, and the leadership which he held as chairman of tho ways and means committee of the last congress has been »n from him by the reappear: ance of Speaker Carlisle upon the floor. Mills is not a great speaker, and as com- pared with Carlisle heis not a greai man. He has not the reading of Carlisle, and his chief forte 1s the tariff, the differ 1ses of which ho has studied to considerable ex- tent, At the time Mr. Mills was chosen as the head of the ways and means committes, 1 called upon him to get the story of his lifc for the New York World. It was in the winter. I found him in his shirt slecves, though the thermometer was at zero and there was snow on the ground. Ho Qid not put. on his coat dar- ing the Interview and notwithstanding the fact that Mrs, Mills was n the room he scemed perfectly at homo. He 18 a big man. Fully six tect high, s arm is as big an one of Jo non’s legs and you can puy the lit- tle head of Henry Cabot Lodgoe inside his big cranjum and there would be an inch of spaco between the outside bones of the ono and the insido bones of the other. L doubt not that the smaller head would contain fully as much braivs as the larger. W. S. Holman is another democratio leader. His long exporience in congress and his knowledge of the ins and outs of con- gressional appropriatious added to a remark- able amount of u certain kind of ability make him one of the ablest men on the floor. He knows just when to object and_how to clog legislation upon any measure that he disap- proves of. Holwan is s curions looking wan. Nature made him whon she was in oher roughest mood and you will not find a curve in the whole six feet of his anatomy. He looks a8 though he was carved out with a square and draw shave. His body isall angles and his tongue is the most angular of tho whole. When he sveaks his voice BOUNDS LIKE A BUZZ SAW that has struck a knot and he cuts the air in geometrical figures, His beard 18 as rough us tho rest of his face and s hair looks as though his head was co He is un uneusy body and is very fond of chewing tobacco. When he ie ot speaking he chews and his jaws in one way and an- ered with cowlicks. other are kept in perpetual motion. For all his roughness, however, he has one of the kindest of bhearts and | b is very popular both here and at home | He lives at Aurora, Indiana, very near where ne was born sixty-eight years ago. He has a fine farm there and is worth, I am told, in the neighborhood of $200,000. He lives here | ata hotel, and he has for twenty-two years paid rent aud board in Washington. There is a score of other leaders in the house of representatives many of whom are able and several of whom have won their spurs in devate. Julius Cwmsar Burrows of Michigan is-a fine speaker with some spread- eagleism about him. Boutelle of Maine is a good speaker and his voice is us strong as that ot the bull of Bashan. Henry Cabot Lodge has both gall ang brain, and Payson of Illinois mukes many & good specch. ~Me-: Comas of Maryland i8 a good talker, and John Dalzell of Penasylvania has shown himself to be man of ability. Blount of Georgiu is NOTHER SPREAD-EAGLE SPEAKEI, and Crisp, the bald-headeq, gets there every time. He does not make many mistakes like that he made while he was in Georgia during the Cleveland adwministration and some mali- cious reporter had telegraphed that a baby had been born in the white house. Crisp thought the report was true and he inade an after-dinner speech, in which he said thav the news had come to him that “in the house of our fatters a child is born, Letus ail unite,” said be, *in the hope that the mother aud baby are well.” His specch was tele- graphed over the country, and when he heard that the report was a false one he grasped at_ his crown with an air as frantic as though it had been covered with haw and he would tear it in his dismay. Mr. Crisp has during the past week jumped Away to the front as the house leader. 'I'he prospect is that he will take the honors from Mr, Carlisle. He 1s very ready in debate, has a strong, full voice and is not afraid of aoything, He is nearly as big as Reed in size, was forty-five years old last month and is m perfect health,” He is, 1 am told, the son of an actor, was born in England, has been in the confederate army and was a judge beforo Lo was elected to congress. He is o well educated man and is & gentlewen and scholar. He possosses, to & marked de- reo, the qualities of leadership, does not 086 his head when on the floor and his com- mund o} the democratic forces is incroasing in power every day. FRANK G. CARPENTER. ——e SALT LAKE NOTES, Politics and Real Estate are Both Decidedly on the Boom. Savr Lage City, Utah, Feb. 6.—|Special to Tue Bee)—"The seething cauldron of politics''—tLis pnrase gets & new meaning from what is now going on in tnis oity, It is a cauldron full and boiling, and contain- g much that is exciting and much that is indigestible, Among the indigestable things are drum corps. You hear drum corps when night scttles on the until then peaceful town, and you hear them when you awake in the morning at that comfortable moment when we turn round for anothernap. I don't know how trueit is, but the report comes to me that the epst is depleted of its drums, having sent every available drum to Salt Lake City. This drumming alternates with musio by the brass bands, and, while these bands are in some respects inferior to Gilmore's, they surpass the latter ia their faithfulness and perseverance. Having once played & tune they keep on playing it uutil every boy i town can whistle it, Then here are flue suppers in the cauldron, en- tertainments to the marching clubn. flag pre sentations, ball most awful charg parties. Iu spite of all of this real estate continues~ to boom and our \rommunl real estate deal ers, as Messrs. Sheley, Gooshell & Co., A* H. Muyne, C. E. Wantiand, the Midland' in" vestment company, ‘A, Wickersham® Beers & Co., Jack, Spafford & Co., Angell & e by both Parkes, L. F. Kullak, Whittemore & Co, to mention oply the leadiog ones, are confident that we are having not an artificially ¥ov.tnn up boom, but & really healthy state of the mar- kot that bids fair to prove the best fleld for investiuent for vears to come. In conversation with Dexter Shiby, a member of the firm of Shiby, Gooshell & Co., the doctor gave me some of his re: lDul for believeing in the steady advance o lrce. *“The foundation of our wealth," '.hu lootor said, “'is in the bappy combivation of mining industry and sgriculture. These sources uf wealth are coustantly being made more productive by the extension of rallroad facilities, the building of good roads and the iuflux of an intelligent and active population. 1 came here two years ago and have seen a steady improvement sirce.” Another gentleman of keen business in- sight and practical experience, A. H. Mayne, called my attention to the great changes made in ‘a few months; the establishment and extension of the electric car systom; the system of sewerage commenc v last summer but already far advanced and cer- tain to bo vigorousiy pushed this year. He said: “Iam not a prophet nor the son of a prophet, but 1 think I am safe 1 saying that Salt Lake City is bound 10 do in _the future as she has in the recent past, and thav she is likely to do very much more. ‘e march of progress once started cannot now be stopped.” Mr. L. F. Kullak, though still a young man, has had considerable experience in the real estate business both 1n California and here. He told me that nowhere in California did he filnd such a substan- tial basis for permanent progr as in Salt Lake City. “He has been very su. cessful since he came here, which was about two years ago. Sunilur remarks were made by others. I will leave for a future Jetter somo of the i teresting things Ilearned in conversation with other prominent dealers in real estate, but I may add just here that Mr. C. E. Wantland calied my attention to the significant fact that whilo the amount invested in building was £1,000,000 10 1858, it rose to $2,000,000 in 1880, Mr. Wantland feelis confident that the latter amount will bo donbled this year. This is also the opinion of Messrs, Scers & Co., all of them cool-headed, experienced busi- ness men, whose past success and present business give them the right to an opinion. In the ofice of the Midland investment company my attention was called to a fine map of Utah gotten up by this company. In reply to my questions as” to tho real estate market thése gentlemen mentioneda few facts that are suggestive of what may be done. In realty the figures are very much higher now. *‘There are four smelters in this valley,the largest of which is' ‘not running. The Hanover produced 9,882,000 pounds of lead, 522,550 ounces of siver, 2,383 ounces of gold, valued ® $550,00u. The Germania 7,672,000 pouhds of lead, all produed 442,137 ounces of silyer, 2,3% ounces of gold and 449,250 poulds of copper. 1t used 43,977,- 089 pounds of ore, 0,108 pounds of coko, 1,052,930 pounJs of chareoal, 6,457,080 pound of lump coal, 3,404,600, pounds of 'slack, 12, 750,460 poundls of limestone, 2,113,490 pounds of iron ore aud 115.550 nounds of scrap iron. “'he Minizo used $78,678 worth ot fuel, 34,63( tons of ore, and produced 5,920,034 pounds of bullion and mattee. Thero aro anumber of mills running in the territory, running quito u number of stamps, The largest 18 that of the Ontario mine, this has forty stamps ana crushed 25,000 tons of ore in 1883, The out~ put of all these smelters and mills has been lurgely wereased since. Among the transfers of real estato last week the following may be noticed: Lots 6 and 7, block 10, B, $25,000; lot_4, block_ 70, plat T, $65,000; lot 8, block 63, plat A, 81 000; wales averaged about $143,000 per day during tho past week. ‘We are having delightful weather, ther- mometer averaged 402 in the dnvLums and over, Clinton Scollard in The Century. If only I might sing Like birds i spring— Robin, or thrush, or wren, In grove or glen. If only I micht suit To harp or lute, To chime in tendér time Sowe touching rhyme,— Then I'd uot hope in vain Thine ear to gain; But now—I halt—I quail— Ah!lmust I failt So small my skl to plead My earnest neod, Love: -love is all the plea I bring to thee. IMPIE Toe ministers of the gospel should organ- ize a sin-dicate. The hymn the morning stars sang to- gether was doubtless written in long meteor, Future comfort is more assured by the cloak of holiness than by the spread of wnfl- delity, ‘We live 8o fast nowadays that it keops the recording angel busy putting down the “breaks.” Exhorter—I tell you, young man, you are going straight to Hades, Young Man—All right, old fel. Au revoir, Aunt Amelia, who is an old maid and fond of children, says there can't be any infants in hell, for the dear little things would make the place quite tolerable. Sunday School Teacher—**By their fruits ye shall know them.” Willie Browa, you may tell me what that means. Willie Brown -:Yo‘;x can always tell a Dago by his banana stand. Mrs. Gray—And has, Rev. Mr, Black's ministry been a very successful one among the people herei Mra, White—O, yes, in- deed. He's had bis salary raised no'less than three times sincehe came. The Peacemaker—Dpn't you know it is very wrong to fight, little boyt What does the good book sayi Tommy (who has just polished off the bully of his ciass)—I dunuo, ILamn't read it no further than David and Gerlire, “Is Mr. Smith a very religious mani” *I guess you'd think so, "I never sawa man more devoted in all my hfe. He attends all the parish fairs, takes s in all the raf- fles, and when it comes to ' Copenhagen he 18 the very life of the church.” A muister when gne day calling upon & parishioner was met at the door by the four- year-old son Sammy. Upon inquiring for the mother he was surpkised to see tue chila rush 1nto the hall apd shou “Mamma ! mamma! Come down guick. Jesus has come! Jesus has come!” Annie's father was 8 very profane man and Annio was five years old before she heard her first sermon. Througbout the services she kept entreating her mamma to take her home. When afterward reproved for her n-ugnhv conduct she excused herself by sayiog: ut, mamwma, [ did vot like the minister, he kep tune.” Pimples, blotches, scaly skin, ugl spots, sores and ulcers, abscesses an tumors, unhealthy discharges, such as catarrb, eczema, rngworm, and other forms of skin diseases, are symptoms of blood impurity. Take Dr. J. H, Me- Leau’s Sarsaparilla, ying swear words all the Excelsior Spmngs Mo. NATURE’S GREAT SANITARIUM. The Most Elogant, Reatful and Deneflcial 1 \ Resorts, THE EI.MS no of the Fine Hotels of the + World, Replete with every com- fort, pleasnre and convenionce. Unapproachable Iniia antractivencss, farishingeand culsine, San- ftary conditions perfect. Al charges reasonable, Within the hot pisto wndof uperb, com: Salt - ~mp|uu Wate Nature's urkish, Elec- for m..-mmumu (mu! Dropsy, Kidnoy, 1 TR P L T DIAMOND CUTTING in OMAHA ‘We do not cut and polish these precious stones as they do it in Am- sterdam, but for the next few days (until our rotail store is rented) we rl;nll (IZUT THE PRICES to the ‘'quick” on all DIAMONDS, mount= ed or loose. £50,000 worth of Gems to go for 825,000, or just Half Price We quote a few ftems to give some idea of the GRAND BAR- GAINS wo now offe GER RINGS: ), §75, §100 to R RIN $50, $75, mon, $2. 2503 worth $5 to yirtug, 50, $500, to §1,000, Worth $20 (0 '$2,000 and Liver Tronbles, Dyspepsis, Blood Dise Alcoholism, Debility and other’ derangements the system, The most astonishing and marvclons dily follow their use. The waters pos- sess propertics and combinations unkuown to any other known spring in the world. They contain Tron in (hat most raro and valuable form for ready ation; namely, & golu- the Protoxide In Carbonic Acid. AR a soly- ent. and diurctic, they are supremely eflicacious, and ns a tonio in upbuilding the worn and debili- 3 PINS ..,o, $10, $15, $20, $25, $35 \\mlh \H!) l« $1,000. NE DIAMOND STUDS: 50, $10, $15, $20, 25, $35, §50, $75, $100 to $500. Worlh $10 to $1,000. Cufl Buttons, Collar Buttons, Gennine Diamond Bracelets, Necklaces, Locksts, ed &) o 0 €4 i bol At corres )UXH“YIL iow pri g e ou B e ha ol EAE Neys Ty MNANENTAL DIAMOND WATCH OASES in largs varlety, complete, with Have restored thousands from tho brink of d.mfi any flr\«t ‘l“.“i«”'.‘x‘f?."(fi‘»‘&"&' (L R T {ron‘! SR HD Lo eriqd ] A AM( GS n stock and made to ordes ‘y(:)lrrrl'llllhm“h iyjheminhey Wil iwiolong Lot DIAMONDS ‘ot ‘all sizes, "from L04 of & kurat to 10 Karats, at Climate mild and healthful, Surroundings beauti- ful. . Tenty-five miles from Kausas City. on the C, TUE WOMLED WATERS ehipped on or- der to all points, Tor full tnformation and flustrated yamphlcts, sddress, EXCELSIOR SPRINGS (0., Excelslor Springs, Mo, rices ranging from 25 to %00 per ku P et it of DiRmonds i speciaity, Estimates furnished on application. An early inspection of our stock will kmphy repay you. MAX MEYER & BRO., (0. Sixteznth anl Farnam §ts, The extreme LOW PRICES previously advertised by us on OPTIC ud al other departments, will continua in force during this OUR GK Old Goid bought £ or taken in SET OF TEETH ON RUBBER For Five Dollars. DR.R. W.BAILEY, Dentist, Paxton Block, 16th and Farnam Str:agts.l' We Are Here to Stay and having within the past two months largely increased our office room, are now better prepared to turn out the best class of work, and much more rapidly than heretofore. We make a full set ofteeth on rubber for FIVE DOLLARS, guaranteed to be as wel made as plates sent out of any dental office in this country. Do not let others influence you not to come, but make us a cali and see for yourself. Teeth extracted WITHOUT PAIN, and without using chloroform gas, ether or electricity. Filling at lowest rates. Remember the lo=- cation. DR. BAILEY, Dentist, Paxton Block. Open eventngs until 8 o'clock Take clovator on 10th strect. 16th and Farnam. Cui this out, Mention this paper. ~ CALIFORNIA THE LAND OF DISCOVERIES. SING TO _TASTE — WEATHTO LEAIE T AR ]’_*L’\’:l rG 511)10}1 o \ \ T N N DNSUMP ,'l‘\sprfikp(owus —~~~Pronehiti e “BIS STHROAT . “B L Iglflc-sgs—gjf}fi\(}m\&\flf Send for mwlusl perbittle 3pr 9 2 I AT SANTA : ABIE : AND : CAT:R: CURE For §7ale by Goodman Drug Co. AT THE EXxposITION=—= ¥ 1CAGO OFTICE INTING Brush Electric Company. Estimates and plans furnished. Cnxrupuudem'o Bsollcites 882-833 N, Y, Life Builaing, - sl 2y ———UNIVERSELLE, PARIS, 1889, ‘The Highest Possible Promium, THE * ONLY » GRAND » PRIZE FOR SLWING MACHINES, W8 AWARDED TO WHLELER & WILSON MFG, C0. =——AND THE-— Omaha. "DEWEY & STONE, Furniture Company A magnificent display of everything useful and ornamental in the furniture muker s art at reasonable pl ices. #CROSS OF THEM LEGION OF HONOR, WAS CONFERRED UPON BUILDERS' FINE BRONZE GOODS Of Every Design and Finish. HIMEBAUGH & TAYLOR, 1405 Dougias St. NATHANIEL WHEELER, —_— e q EMERSON, The President of the Company. Efiififfiim ggi‘hx‘:‘fia DAVIS MBALL, WHEELER & WILSON MFG, CO. ,Adgglgglgggvmba SFPTANOS & ORGANS 185-187 ws-‘l;:ulr; .:’vc » Chicago, FRAMES, J $FSHERT MUSIC. P. E. FLODMAN & CO 220 N, 16th 8t., Omaha, Neb. Omaha, Nebraska 1513 Dou las Street, ‘lm GRAIN DEALERS | GHIGHESTER'S ENGLIBH PENNYROYAL PILLS, NEC CROSS DIAMOND BRAND. Parties interested i selling corn or regu'a 10 corn will do well t write to the Unite Sugar Refinery, of Waukegan, (ls. wh are just startiug up their large works and wil | uso 10.000 bushelu per day, and pay cash, Wnite corn preterred us It 1s useil exclusively for the o of o Lo, b3 -mm.n...u hishssiar Cuain, O, Kotinatie. DEAF::it.suty M USHian] ; Beif- Ad)s manufucture of fine syruvs wnd glucose. your corn direct to the consumer ana save wll middlo chargos, We are conuected with ovory trunk lipe 10 (hicago by the Waukegan South-Western K. K-, and all p- pod direct Without Ghange of cArs At Chicago ro can bo sl Unitep Sranks Buaan lers m, Omana, SPENCERIMO':E.%: c“ll:‘&:?m amy wu\l \reaknew, lost mauhivod d e l:"\‘l ul"l [ h ciiiars for "x:una"m"u'--am" o read by e P wh 15, mereoun aad debilitaiad. Jadresd, ol ¥, C, lowtnu.no dus,Co) PRACTICE LIMITED TO DISEASES OF WOMEN, Office, B, E.Cor, 1ith aad Douglas i, Omata Ne ‘and Buperintendance. 10 o3, ot Bpecial” Muchlaery, ats VARENT OFFICH won& A SPECIALTY, x ot : = 56 (seatod) wl;wnlnl l’nr. JOHN C. JONES, i )

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