Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 16, 1890, Page 11

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ENTY PAGE e e e Dean, Armstrong & Go WHOLESALE CIGARS 402 North Sixteenth Street, OMAHA, NEB. THE W. 0. DERN O FACTORY NO. 140, CANTON, ILLINOIS. CalDeCiiy ICE 1880, 11,800,000. B ARMSTRONG BROS FACTORY NO. 176, CANTON, ILLINOIS, Capacity for 1890, 9,700,000 L — stayed at home and continued to be a money maker. Among other changes, I note that theoldest and fattest men in this house have been left, George Barnes of Georgia, who weighs 400 pounds, and says he would not sell an ounce of his superfluous flesh for 31,000, will go baclk to his law practice in Augusta. General Vanderver, the old stager of California, will carry his seven ars back to his dis- trict, and he will probably not_be heard in congress again. General N. P, Banks is an- other old stager, who is replaced by a young man, Sherman Hoar has his seat In ihe Massa- chusetts delegation. A number of the oldest members in_pointof service have been re- tired and about one-third of the house is mado up of new men. The average life of a bu is twenty years. The average c ts only four years, and every congress sees about one-third of the heads of its members chopped off to make room for others, Tle rewards of poli in the United States grow less and lessas the years go on. The averuge congressman of today is nothing but the errand boy of his constituent and be gets paid for his services, a salary which will not enable him to live as well here as he does at horme. It takes him about four years to learn how to do the business of his new position, and when he finds things casy for him, hé wakes up to learn that his successor has been clected. Quay deuls in master strokes, and an_ex- amyle of lis political methods was seen in his turning the sentiment of sporting _classes to Harrison during the last campaign, ‘The betting was all in favor of Cleveland and Quay saw that it was going to influence the dlection. He sent General Swords one night with £10,000 in cash_to the Hoffman house she devoted herself to the stranger within her gates, The flowers were a miracle of color and perfume, the earth was ransacked for deli- cacies, the prettiest women and cle men of two continents were sceured ts, the music cost thousands and a dels ion of the most finished and gifted actors in the world ed the channel from th Comedie Francuise to amuse the guests afte dinner, tents drained without tasting. It was marked that the coffee was ‘‘d—d strong, but no particular attention was paid to the matter. The evening meal completed, the pipes wero bronght out and the tobaceo sought. Butin place of tobacco they found coffee, which refused to burn as the tobacco had cooked. The long freight trains of lessthan a de- cade ago have gone out of business or “‘moved west.” And what few are in_existenc but remnants of what was. F a dozen | Mrs. Mackay is as calmas a summer morn- vears ago these freighters growled agood | ing at her gilled evenings, while giving all deal because theve was no busine: Ra at a summer morning can of pleasure, roads have cut off the profits, avd, like the shness and joy com mand railroads, these freighters looked for the [ tion and can ask you to meet a princes “long haul.” Indian agencies knocked the | Since the marriage of her duughter Exa to former profits and business when Indians | the Prince Colonna, Mrs. Mackay's whole were made their own freighters; and rail- en concentrated upon the rouds came later, until now the freight haul ucation of her two boys, for she hias simmered down to a few miles and a few most loving mother, cents. never forg otten he,country or her These freighters were happy-golacky fel- | old friends. To her husband her children, lows, distinct from the cowboy, yet full [ hercountry and her church —she is u devoted of generous impulses and free with their | Catholic Mackay has unever falteréd money. Some of the managers and owners | in devotion. ~And all the whiie she turned their uttention to other business a d social triumphs which no other they observed the downward tide, and some | American ever knew at the courts of the old of Nebraska's heavy western capitalists once [ world. owned great trains and began life as *‘mule skinners” and “*bull whackers,” Opportuni- ties and circumstances made men of the sen- sible aud far-sceing, while a great drifted away into the going channels—good natured fellows, liking the frontier world and its lonely life, but lking the merry making red eye better, Eb. A. Fry. e is not, however, on touch with the politi- ans and don't know enough about what is going on to be much of an adviser. He was President Harrison's old law partuer, and understands him very well. Secretary Tracy has_nad much closer, relations President Harrisonsince his wife died. can hardly be called a member of the kitchen cabinot, and the same is true of Secretaries Proctor and Noble. Oue of the closest friends here, and one in whom he seems to have implicit confidence is Dan Ransdell, the marshal of the district. He is a one' armed soldier and an old comrade of Presi- dent Harrison's. He is always arouud and amongst the people, and he keeps the presi dent posted to 4 certain extent as to what is gomg on. Tt was he who was the go-be- tween of the presidentand Tanner at the time of their trouble, and he is assurediy one of the kitchen cabinet. Another man in whom_ the president has great confidence, and who will have move influence than ever, | T is Louis T. Michener, the attorney general of the state of Illinois, and the chai n of the state republican committee. He is, I under- stand, coming to Washington to be purtner with Dudley in his pension and law business, and he will'be a constant visitor at the white house. ~As to the president’s own family, I don’t think Elijah Halford is us good a mixer as Dan Lamont, but he is the wateh: dog of the president’s private office, and bas more or less influence, Russell Harrison is not herc enough to give his opinions and Bob McKee is devoting himself 10 his shoo business in Indianapolis. This man wonld be a very valuable addition to the president’s political family. He is a quiet, pleasant mannered fellow of thirty-six with good address. He does the president good anc to}d him to bet this money on the elec- | wherever he goes and he is very plain and tion of Harrison, aud bet aven. 1f odds were | out-spoken in his expressions of the situa- offercd he was not to take them. The demo- | tion to him. crats wero I had a talk today with the Rev. Doctor " SURPRISED AT THE DLUFF, Martin, the president of the Imperial col- Ten thousand dollars is large amount to | lege at’ Peking. He has just come from put up on a moment's notice and the demo- | China and he is spending a few mouths in crats had some trouble in raising it. They | America in getting out a book on the Philoso- saw however that they would have to cover | phy and Education of the Chinese There is it, and they took the bet. This fact was | perhaps no man in the world outside of telegraphed out over the country and also | China who is better posted on the Chinese the statement that the republican national | and the Chinese government than Dr. committee had made the bet. The next | Martin, For the past thirty years e has night General Swords appeared again at the | boen one of the leading Chinese officials, and Hoffman house with auother £10,000, und the | though beis an American, he draws o big livan Cox, the brightest wit in congress for | democrats had more trouble in coveriug this | salary from the emperor of China and he is th past generation, and a democrat who was | than they had in vaising the money for the | employed to tuke cliarge of the college whicl 2 ” ¥ rst one. he next night Swords™ appeared EDUCATES THE N as strong In the froe tradecloment of bis | Arstonc, Mo uoxt WELCWONS hpoared | ebvoxres ma vousa A ar Tiandal) wid 1 with $10, ¥ X hinamen and_Tartars of high degree in party P (im\) sent, )m;n lllp \\]nn al llhu $10,000 and | o oniences. Many of the best Chinese di- THE SIDE OF PROTECTION the managers of the democratic party s R o i e The death of Senator Beck took John G. | thatthis was also tuken. By this time how. | PIOmAts who now répresent Ching at foreign Carlisle from the ranks of the house, Mor- | ever, flu‘l'_-"'h on tho ““;"} ‘};‘d been Gyenon | and ho tells me that the college is limited to rison was long ago shelved by being put on [ SOth candidutes awith tho e angata | one hunared and twenty pupils and that the iuterstate commerce commission, and B consider o with | these pupils receive regular salaries from the the sentiment had considerable to do with | gaae PUPIS Eeeive vekular saigries from tho now all that is left of tho democratic lights of | the election. 2 bt g,“.‘,rm‘l‘“}"“‘“{“‘\"“;“i;l: {or Rodatdetad years ago are William 8. Holman, the great | - Dudleps stong point in the last ean- | yho oxaminations., He' tells me that pass objector, and *‘Rise-up” William Springer, l‘f“k‘;‘ (“l' < he ll'“""“"l‘/« m““"‘u'.i_“; Chinese youth is fully as bright as the Amer- who has been tramped upon again and again | wOISGEE PAWE | O SRRSO How to | lcan youth, and he predicts u great change in by the ponderous feet. of Speaker Reed, but | koop his mon in jecod working order, “Asan | (Ei03 Whan our knowledge shall ‘hecome who springs up with all the elasticity of the | Instayce of how hie manages such matters, 1o | ' gisiced Dr. Martin whether ho thought the India rubber man at the cireus. had I e l,“:“]" of !“““"‘".‘ alone 1,900 | Gpinese people hag deteriorated and whether Tho republicans, though they have been | persounl political correspondents, "und ' Lie | e nation had passed its prime. ~He replied afficted less by death than the democrats, | Pttt o o ek o any otho o ot i | T think that the Chinese mind is as bright 0 Dudley did as much as any other man at the | (oauy as it hus ver beon and 1t Seoms t iy nave lost everywhere by defeat. MeKiuley, | revublican headquarters, to make Harrison Sratuirrmdge iyt i s after a close fight, will bave a chance to prac- | president, and he has, Paw told, not had an | gt (MERACE WEE0 b ong, OL BIe T tice law at Canton, Ohio, and Speaker Reed [ Interview with the president since his clec- | pe'the Germans, the Anglo-Saxons including will bave to come down out of the chair and take the leadershipof the republican party on the floor of the house, He will find mauy of tion. Ho s devoting himself strictly to law ) \ i : oting It strictly 10 law | {he Euglish and Americans, and the Chinese, » T8 8861 Y0 €0 ) s sources is ab W0 ayear. o with the rest. You do not get the best pro- o tho uasortio vy, : of | And s President Hareison a kitchen cav- | W00 (il in ‘vour Chifeso popul 1 remember one time boing obliged to wait bis lloutenants missing. Major Ben Butter- |inelt =0 T TGO R Yoo to this e four days at the hotel of a froutior town, in worth has retired from political Ife and has | Well, es. Nobu very big onc nor s very | boen matnly from the south of Clina, where | fils Statg where therewas plenty, But the accopted the management of the world's fir | gype” Jt 'nas not tho weight with bim that | th poople ave the poorest, and ouly the poor: | came " near starving. I the L exposition at Chicago, General Cutcheon of | Henry A, Wise and others had with Presi- | S8 4nd most ignorayy lave como 0 this | o roight train staried on its long, to Michigan, after eight years of active service, | dent Taylor during his administration, and it o oy Thoy o trong linibed | Jouruey of 130 miles. We struck a late camp, is replaced by a democrat, and bold Bob | does not :}v{rm\»l‘:‘,};.-‘xvc,»aJu:.EA;l.iul thelkitchen | und thoy have fine fa They o ot do- | 8d it \as dark before finishing the meal of Keunedy of Obio, notwithstanding bis attack | Sabinct of Audvew Waclion, when Amos | siro to emfgrato and thatigh the Chinese goy- | N iscult aud black coffee, 't dou'd think /upou the senate, is elected to stay at home. | Jitical ideas of “Old Hickory,” Sl it keops | frhment dogs not fecl at all pleased b the | 1, dishes were silver plate besido the hotel One of the most noticeable changes in the | the president posted toa certain degree on | {510 RRE PN ARS FES ‘.m\ve’lfu Seopls ‘L_U-“m quantity and quality, and I believe any oune west will be the retirement for the time of who has passed through @_similar ex perionce Joseph G. Cannon of Ilinols, For eighteen years o hias beeu o member of the house, To came bere when he was thirty-six and left a splondid legal business and the chances of a fortune, For nine congresses he has what is going on about him, and tries to help to thi - 7 4 ' 0 this o try. ! POn- h him in doing what is best for himself, for it, | 10,115 CoUntay, 1 think the wotlon of con | will bear'mo out in saying that the rough ¥ | camp meal is no stomach killer after once get- served the republican party, and for at least eight of these ho has boen one of the leaders. | and for the paryy. General Clarkson’ is one y a B atbels of the oablnsh Anotue ANIURRD THE AMERICAX INTERESTS ting into the rope membe rof this cabinet is Postmaster Gen- | i the fureast, and I do not apprehend that | 1o the early days of freighting betw eral Wanamaker, He and the president are [ Americans will ever get the concessions as | Niobrara and Omalia a party of *old tim ¢ a sociated in social and church mat- | 1 railroads and banking which they expected | oomposed of H. Westermann, Chris Benner ‘and they talk over many of the admin- | 10 obtaiu o few you oy .\"l".”-‘k“' me as | and Tom Hullihan, struck camp gver on the ey foR g G L T o the young em peror. . He is doing very well | gast “branch of Brazl creek. Benner was ke goes back to his district and to private lifé A COMPARATIVELY POOR MAN He once told me that his congressional life had been a poor investment for him and that bo would have been wuch wiser o huve MEN OF THE NEW CONGRESS. There Will Be Many Strange Faces at the Next Session, {HOSE WHO FELL BY THE WAYSIDE. WESTERY “MULE SKINNERS." Joe Kerr in Chicago Ints Dead—a tramp, forty.or the With full hex Fr Ocean, Lhouts, in stragg none Another Old-Time Western Industry Pass- ing in Decay. there wer yuches grant him gr Stark there he Tay . mentof thest UnXkept. uncl of Dead und liap, A dark, une TOOTHSOME DELICACIES OF THE CAMP, tramp, & vagrant—rns The Iron-Horse and Mule Train Look- ing for the Long Haul—) braska Bull Whackers and Mule Skinners. : antl uncared-for muss of How Cannon Has Sacrificed His Finan- cos for Poltiical Success—Quay’s Ten Thousand Dollar Bluffs— President's Kitchen Cabinet. Yes.for Hunger, hisareh enemy, Had seery the broken heart within g Into the and then, and brought It to an end; sd soulonwird toits Godl, wis half conce ded zs upon the silenced Beneath tl breast, As the' tne praled niute, motionless und Tast request. L ! Uit unwepl. i sou ot o, Witha mournful smile Nionkara, Neb.,, Nov. 11.—[Sp 1 to Tue ]—The rapid growth of our state and adjoining frontiers is taking from them many of those unique means of travel kuown only toour west, The “way back cast” means of conveyance in tho carly times was a very tame affair, and those long voyages by water alongz the Atlantic coast to Ame great- est eity afforded none of the sume exeite- ments experienced by western stage coaca or a mule freight train. A mule train is only equalled in slow mov- ing by tue bull train. The former is made up from six to eight spans of mules with a “jerk line” on the nigh side of the lead, and the conductor of the train curses in pure English and talks to the beasts in mongrel Spanish, The “jork line” answers the purpose of reins and it matters not how greal the load or how many mules in that division of the train, the | came the otner day. Her half-dozen guns safety of the burden lies with the lead team | were in prime condition, not having been and a California break on the lead wagon, A | fired ou the trip, and herhoid was not laden single train is composed of ot less than two | WIth the spolls of seizume, says tho San Evan: m""l:gl]y‘{;‘::;: "'Mg"r;;';s';;ghl','\,w‘l;l;_';:‘;:;ie‘};;{ news. When the Rush left San Francisco nection with the lead team; The wagons are stiol firse Swent1onBLma alnd., - The great affairs and carry two tons each, thus | syat H o i the sick natives. Thence she sailed to Ouna- waking a freighting outfitat 1 cont a pound " R R for 100 miles & paying caro. laska and finally iuto Behring sea July 11. f She staid in the sea until September 11, In crossing any considerable stream or [ Tu ol that time but five soalers were making a long hill the trail wagons are according to the officers’ state- dropped and each one is taken singly. All Three of them were supposed to be this takes time, and fiften wiles o day is were orderod out of the sea fair average speed. Sometimes one has The other two scalers had the scarcely settled a five o'clock breakfast when b (A D AT L AR St e the hill four miles distant is raacned * for din- | wae boarded.© Ono of thom was. the Neliis and then again watering places must be | Muptin of Junea and the other the Kate and reached and the day's worlimay be completed | Aonioof Portiand Ore. They were s in that distance only. —But this distance is | 3,0 skins were found, and they were allowed possibly made up the next day by along | o miihs Wore ! rive, no dinner and weary logs. ~The mules | 40 velt Wik 4 of the more | parg gaid yeste fhat during the cutire ats or corn, feed of the teuder | Guiia not fifty seals were seen where thou- grass often takes them miles from | ganas thrived last yoar. Itappears that the Then is when the Mexican swears in | yilling donain the sea has not so demoraliz con English or the Yankee tries to entice | {liy n effoct as the wholosalo slaughter com the mules by mongrel Spatfiah. mitted along the coast from Point Reye The cooking is all varieties, with a dish of | Norrh ns far as Unimak piss. The oficers Mexican chilla collara (el pepper) as & | g that during the present season the seal moruing tone, The biscuiv thstes of old lard | Rokaries wora baro, - Grass fourishad whero and cheap ba g powde and its condition o] 0 O 1r0) o When cold would unswer vory well for a do. | tiousands of secls onco congrogated fense against Indiaas on the war-path, A - 1 little pnve mother soil and & mere tuste of nose and throat, Bee bldg wagon grease, ‘often dished up in siippery o tin plilll's. may seem to go back on my fine- fold of r [Copyright 1890 by Frank G. Carpenter.| Wasmizaroy, Nov pecial to Tue Be The Fifty-second congress will be practically & new body. A new element jumped into politics, and fresh blood,whether for good or evil, flow through the veins of legislation. During the last two years, death and defeat have been playing havoe with our politicians, and the elections of last week add to the many who have fallen by the wayside. For twenty years one of the strongest men {n the house of representatives was Samuel Randall of Pennsylvania. He was an ori nal thinker, and his iron will molded the work bf a large section of his party. He fought for his ideas through many changes of party sentiment, and during the present con- gress he died in the harness for a protective tariff. The famous Pig-Iron Kelley came in- to the house while Lincoln was president and for nearly a generation, his strong voice and keen brain had their effect upon the republi- can side of the tarift question. He, too, was was a leader of men, and as the father of the house, he had great influence and a large following. Now he is dead, and the eulogies of his fellow members are in the Congres- Bfonal Record side by side with Samuel Sul- ors 1o the straggling heart ap- ix In« Dead G upon his pallia fuco To join the throng the rod” With hatti Jootsteps they can Yos, dead: but pressed within the e heart A sfgnthe concentration of a father’s earth= —————— Dr. Birney cures catarrh, Bee bldg ———— Substitutes for Wooden Railroad Ties. ‘The wooden ties now in use upon the tracks of the ited States number The average life of a wooden tie 1n is six and a half y ays the St. Louis v, therefore, The interestin the fact that in this country ubstitutes for wooden ties. One ingenious individual has protected an idea for glass ties, An Englishman has taken out lette his _own couutry, the United States, F Belgium and Spain for a tubular tie of concrete or some other comp t avound a core of wire netting. Oue proposition is o manu- facture rails, ties, and other articles for trackage from a composition of paper pulp, silicate soda and bar Th ' proportions are 50 parts pulp, parts soda, and_ten parts barytes. Twoin ventors, workihg jointly, have evolved t sugeestion of terracotta or carthenware pyr mids to support the rails. The pyramids are to be connected by iron metal ties. Au earlier device isa conerete tie with wooden blocks inscrted for the rails to be spiked upon. The idea of a metal skeleton or framework tie covered with concrete or a inl stone comes from France to be patented. Concreto blocks with cock plates for the rails to rest upon are suggested. Concrete chairs and blocks and compositions of fiber sonked with asphaltum and shaped by pressure were among the carliest designs. Butof the vatented. substitutes for wood but eleveu ai metal. who have “‘passed 'nenth or retrace. o'er 5 a wee. solled token, but precious par Of lier whose soul he se e FUTURE OF SOUTH AFPRICA. shes for above. O for 80,601,000 new ties. " this subject is wetl shown by 491 patents have been issued to inventors of s Dr. Birney cures catarrh, Bee bldg {GUIOHBOIBIN, The Seal Rookeries Grass-Grown. From the region of ice and suow aud of poachers and smugglers the cutter Rush Enorn sources Awaite Theresourees of South Africa are simply enormous, and ull that has bean done y develop them is_but s will bo done. The: gold industry ginning tobe placed upon a and yet the return ul counls of millions a tion of the known gold touched, waiting for the rafllways which must soon reach them. Silver muilng 15 being prosecuted with vigor, and promises the most excellentresults. Coal of good quality exists almost everywlhore in vast quantities, and other minerals abound. Large industrial populations will spring up, and the prosperity of those who follow agricultural and pastoral pursuits must, with the increase of railway communication, be assured. The prospect is assuredly a bright one, All South Africans devoutly hope that it ¥ ot bo marred by any untoward intor- > from outside, savs the Fertnighly There is riom for any number of Scttle n the conntry, and the more of it sort who will leave theovercrowded British isles, and establish new homes over there, the bettor, but they must come us Jlonists and make up their miads to be South Africans, If they ecutertain the idea thatit is v stiny to settle South A frica without the fullest recognition of the rights i the position of the people who are there ulreudy, or think that the “Dutch must go to the wall," and be belped to go there, ouly mis- chief will ensue, Newcomers must resolve to abjuro race quarrels and disputes or dis- cussi d o look upon the old popu suntry men and fellow worl kof civilizing tha maygniticent 1 5 before thom. 1t must be left to the people of South A frica to work out their own - destiny, unvexed by the imperial purliatment and the i perial fude dist; und Englishmen at home may look on with equanimity at the realiztion of the doctrine. “Theimperial government on the coast and South A frica for the people who live in it," knowing full well that, whether the repliblican flag continues te' wave or peaccably disappear n_the process of time, there will be a practically united dominion, in which British civilization and British on- terprise will have the fullest scope to. assert is just bo- proper footing, amounts to i The greater por- fields lies as yev un- m few seals. The offi- — Dr. Birney, nose and thro e . i, , Bee bldg. Charles J. Van Depoele, who has heen prominently identified with the development | of electrical traction for strectrailway purpo ses, has devisep an clectrical power hammer which represeats a radieally new application of elect ro-magnetic priciples, says the Phila- delphin record. Iu general design the ham mer is quite similar to the steam hammer, with its vertical cvlinder mounted upon an arched frame, und the vising md fulling pis ton by which'the hammer head is carried The novelty of the apparatus lies in the sub- stitution of clectro-magnetic power for steam by a slight and very simple modification of the mechanicism. ‘The piston is of maguetic erial, and the cylinder 15 composed of a es of coils through cach of separatoly “The apparatus is virtually an immense clec- tro-magnet, the eylinder being the coil and and the piston answereing to the The passage of an electric current through the coils forming the ypper part of the eylinder raises the piston nto_ the magnectic fleld |y N thus created. By cutting off the current and ¥ £ simultaneously transferring it to the lower Dr. Bl coils of the eylinder the piston s released ) ’ and its decent is accelerated by the magne traction created below. As a magnetic field can be created in any of the series of coil the blow may readily be shortened or length® jed as desired. The current is coutrolled ¢ levers and connections identical with thos usedon an_ordinary steam hammer. The absence of the steain pipe is the ouly featur distinguishing the machine from the common sto am hamm vr neroas and impressi in London of the American persuasic has been Mrs, Mackay, says Mrs. M. ror- wood in the New York Sun. She has such abundant wealth at her command that one pected to eat trufiied irds of paradise, and to be served with wine in goblets cut out of rubies at her table, Mrs, Mackay has made @ bold stroke by going to London and getting herself endorsed by the prince and princess of Wales, wiose tis accepted as readily in Paris as iu for they ure both great favorites in nch capital. With the future king of England on her side she was safe, for the prince is practically the English social Qictator. Mrs. Mackay offered him a oper piriy waioh he knew by experienco would be a good onme, and the prince, who 15 & great gorment, and sincerely likes the energetic Catifornians, signified his ac- ceptance. t was a feast, Nothing could have been a greater success. The hostess, with mucn good taste, wore no jewels, and was as sim gly gowned as the least pretentious of her > hostess of late - cures catarrh, | - “The present economical condition of F'rance is considered unusually favorable by her statesmen, Thb harvest this year was about 120,000,000 hectolit grain, the largest of the last ( sxport of manufacturers has ine 1l as the import of raw matevials. 30, (00,000 lie in the savings banks. v profits have also increased, on points outside of their cabiuet con- ) sultations. Wanamaker is a good deal of a | A8d shows himself to bea wan of braius and | chief cook, uitd the camp having been made dipldmat, * He has studied the moods of the | Of progyessive ustincts, He bas the inter- | late o particular atteution was paid to the ests of the people at heart and his adminis- | i N0 PHTS 0 8 pald 1o & president, and be is biunt enough at the same | €37 of the o e .\ vation Is popula HANK G. CARPENTER. | Gstrong cup of coffe Hungry, foot-sore, | guests ¢ kindness and thoughtfulness time to e thirsty, the trio sat down to'a stewming | were apparent to every observer, for she lmost The railw TELL MIM ME IS WRONG Lo attorucy gencral Las - S it Le thivks so. Dr. Birney, nose and throat, Bee bld'g, repast, The coffee was poured and the con | the aukes ana marqulies tako cuto” of tueu- Dr.Bivney curos catarch, Beo bld.g Dr. Birney, nose and throat, Bee bldg.

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