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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE. THURSDAY. JANUARY 29 1891, THE Judge Clarkeon will go to on Febrs 1 hold court Clerks are at work making up the tax list for 1801, ‘Tl tax becomes payable May 1und delinguent July 1 The rature loc A 3 follows ALT oo, and at 1p. m, 53 The Omaha Associntion of Static Engincors hns moved its headquartes into neat and commodious rooms on the scventh Noor of Tk BEr building, Everything points towards all who tend having a very enjoyable evening the benefit ball to Captain John Ande son’s family, by the Modern Woodme of Ameriea, nt Washington hall, Friday evening, January 50, At the last meeting of trade a resolution was passed expressing the appr ion of the board at the ap- pointment of Colonel €. S. Chase of Omaha as chairman of the committee on #cope and plan of the proposed pan-re public congrc Superintendent James has complained to the chiel of police that two hoys nomed 1d Smith - and m Sullivan ited a disturbance at the Franklin school by screaming, whistling, L and epitting in the y8 are about fifteen CITY. nmah the board of Mayor Cushing i is annunl report or getting matter for dress to the coun cilin order. He h decided to give n brief synopsis of each of the reports of y officers together with his personal commendations as drawn from thosgo statements, The reports will not all be in his hands before February 1, and to get his review before the ut February 10, s returned from State whicre he was ealled by th Mollie Ward, his sister s young lady died of diph- wuthorites of the lTowa frightened over the ap- ince of the d that they tried 0 prevent Mr. O'N om leay he and it was only after a most pe ent effort that he secured proy medical attendance for the unfortunute young ludy. The Kir church w © were 8o Daughters of give an entertuinment this g which promises to bo very interesting and enjoyuble event, A pantata will be rendered by a number of young ladies who will represent various flowers, while another company of the Davg hters will pretty tambourine Mra, W, ( underland | rgo of the entertainment and she worked indefatigably to make it what it deserves to be—one of the cesses of the season. County Treasurer Snyder insists the is not five times the amount of work con- nected with the city treasurer’s offic with his, He says however, that there issome more work connected with My, Rush’s oft than with his own, but Swhen it is procinimed that there is a difterence of five times in the amount, the assertion immediately falls to the groundin the face of fucts,” My elerical force neve itate to work over hours ver necessary. which is something very froquently D. H. Wheeler and othe in the city a week or ten d chasing steers, which Thursday to Columbus, din, says the Greeley (Col.) Thego gentlemen h tion of land near O where they e peet to pasture the cattie from this herd, which are not in condition to be fed or fattened for market. The number pus chused from Greeley persons was some- thing over five hundred, which greatly reduced the supply of young steers in this vicinity at present.” The gentlemen who wore second parties to this deal are J. A. Rakin, Alexander Mead, A ling, Robert Boyd, Albert tHoward H. F. Currier. There is no aanger of a cold resulting in preumonia when Chamberlain's Congh Ren- edy is used as directed “for a sever It effectually counteracts and ari tendency of @ cold to resultin pn This fact was fully proven in thousands of cases during the epidemic of influenza last winter, For sale by all druggists. THE SEEDY W All Saints’ m Har- Demoerat. © a loase on a se TERNERS, A Statement of the Case by the Eelief Commission. Laxcoly, Neb., Jan. 2. —To the Editor of Tue Bre: For the last few days editorially you have rather been making light of the Higures that I gave your representative in the house of representatives last Saturday, I stated to him very distinctly that they were not my figures, that it was the estimato as made by the county officers 1n the various counties that were affected by the drouth of the past season, and I asked him particu- larly to make that statement, offering him a copy of the statement which appeared in Tur Bre this morning. He said that he thought the summary of the figures us given would be sufticient. The figures on this tabulated statement are taken from the official reports made January 1 or thereabouts, not varxing more than three days, by the county ofticers in the va- rious counties aamed. These reports are on filein our ofice, signed by the county com- missioners or bourd of supervisors where they are under township organization, county clerk, county attorney, and in many cases the sheriff, county treasurer and county judge some of them even going so far as to afidavitto the truthfuluess of their report. In the majority of the cases they veported the names of the township, range and lot number of each and every ove asking for aid. I do not know how wo could have wad any moro accurately than that. Where the give us the actual count of the destitute, we give tiem credit, for it in the column, In the first column following the name of the county you will notice occasionally one- nalf or one-fourth inserted. In these coun- ties the number as isions was esti- mated, and the actual count was not given. We simply divided the county officers’ fig- ures by two. 1thiuk that Trne Bee bas done the relief commission a little injustice 1 the mauner they mado their report Saturday. The totals you see are now 1,106 higher for seed grain than w © vour reporterlast Saturdny This i caused by, the faot that a few of the counties have filed add tional reports over their report given Janu 1, and the increaseof those requiring food supplies is 511, It is true, #s you stated i Tur Bee of yesterday, that Dr. Martin made a canvass of five counties, nd v )0 families des- titute, but since that time the number of five destitute counties has increased until this list gives thirty-two, while we nave four other countics, Franklin, Nuckolls, Valle Grant, asking for supplies of seed gruin. | We have not the ofticial statements from these counties and hence have not included them in this tabulated statement The newspapers next to the railroads, if P not first, have done more toward bringing about the' work of relief than any other force in the state, and we do like to have them publish the matter just as it stands. In making our estimate of the grain needed wo took the estimates of the various countie struck an average and divided it by two, then simply cast up the account by the 's plest rules of multiplication, so many bushels of grain per family, at the price grain was selling, as quoted “in Tuk Bee the day that w made the estimate. Very respectfully yours, Lutner P, Lubpex General manager R H, L. Ellett, representing Ellett, Rosen bmun Bros. & Co., Union stockyards of Chi is in the city aud s & guest of Captuin 0 Donohoe. NORSE'S (LhARl\(, SALE. Thursday, Friday and faturday, Great Dags. We Take and Inventory Saturday Night for ‘Ihrec Days Have a Special Sale, We have 3 days in which to close out odds and ends before our inventory and place on eule all odd lots and short eut silks, velvets, blankets and of dress goods, , flannel suitings, AND CHILD'S and underwear; everything the treat as hosiery thrown will we do on counters and we odds and ends what not wish to inventory; all short cut pieco goods in every depart- ment; all broken sizes in MEN'S, WOMEN'S, CHILD'S HOSIERY AND UNDERW EAR. Remuants of sheeting, linen towels, a trimmings and broken boxes of buttons rtment will bo represented We call ks, all goods being closed in this sale. particular atten- tion to our ¢ out at one-third off THE MORSE sgular prices, DRY GOODS CO. kot g Grand Opaning. Thursday _evenit anuary 29, at rles A Kollmeye V.| W, 18th and Dod 1; fine lunch and good musie. cabinet beer on draught. CHARLES A, KOHLME P R Y THE DUFIY INQUE Krug's ER. Several Witnosses Eyamined by the Coroner's Jury Yesterday "The coroner's inquest over the remains of Peter Duffy, who was killed by a motor train at the cc of Eighteenth and Butt Tu day evening, was held yesterday afternoon at Heaffy & Healty's undertaking rooms Elwood Nixon, the motor train conduetor, and Mosos, the motorman, were called as witne d related the incident in substantially the same mauner. They stated that their train was running eastward on Burt about 6:15 Tues day uight and the conductor gave the motorman one bell, the usual , to stop at the eastside of Bighteenth. This al was given when the train was about twenty feet west of the west side of Eighteenth street. ‘The motorman applied the brakes and began to check the speed of the train, About the time the train r tecuth L Saw A from At o very 0 bein Thomas sig He scemce to in front of the tr. but as ho to Burt street, al most to th of the motor he turned east lriving to the cast side of Kighteenth in the nortn street car track He was about six feet in advance of the motor train, but not directly in front of it, for it 15 v double track and the motor train was on the south track. Soon after the man in the buggy, who proved to be Peter Duffy, passed the east crossing of Eighteenth strect, he suddenly turned s horse to the north, ‘The tinped up on the right wheels and him over onthe south rail of the ack upon which the motor train was then nning, and about five fect in front of the rds on the front end of the motor car. e man said he reversed the elec- tric current and put on the brakes as hard as he could when he saw the buggy tip, but he could not stop until the car struck Duffy and shoved himabout six feet. When he and the conductor ran around the eav they saw him under the guards and backed the train off him, Duffy.was lying on his back and was ruised about the head and face and in the it hip and groin, “The train men both claim that the tram was not rmuing more than four or miles an hour when they went across ighteenth street. A colored woman named Ophelia_Clemens, who was on the front car at the time of the ont, was callod, She said the man—or . as she thought at the time—who drove the horse seemed to be in a great hurry und drove very carlessly. She exclaimed o a friend in the car as she saw the horse and buggy dash up, “Look at that fool woman; she is going to dri into the tra " Just then she saw the man fall out of the buggy and right in front of the train. G. W. Blankensnip, a colored man of South Omaba, who was with Miss Clemens on the front car, gave about the same version of what he saw’ at the time of the accident. He thought the train was not running more thaa six miles an hour, W. H. Teter, who lives at street, was standing on the front the back car. he saw Dufly coming down Eightecnth street aad says that the horse was ina gallop. He saw the horse make a sudden turn and saw the buggy tip aud the mun fall over. He thought the train was not making over five miles an hour at the time, The jury went to Duffy's residence and viewed the remains and then, as there were veral other wituesses that could not be psent yesteraay, 4 postponement was taken until Friday av 4 p.m, Caldwell atform of Men's Ma ‘We have women's Kintosh Coats. a special lot of men’ English mac beautiful styles, and intosh coats, warranted waterproof and suitable for any kind of weather. Men’s on main floor, ladies’ on third floor. THE MORSE DRY GOODS CO. —— ANNOUNC The play at the Grand next ing will be Sunds A Cold Day, or the Laplanders,’ The play dc much claim to any plot, but has been written to give the com- pany a chance to make the audience laugh, "Phe action of the play is at Long Branch and aboard a steamer at sea. During the play Misses Carlotta, Helght, Brooks and Mar- conir and the male members of the com- panv sing a number of popular songs, among which are numbers from * “Adonis,” “Evangeline,” and T e S o A eodnin specialty, “I'm So Shy."” “A Cold I altogether one of the funniest pl season, ‘The reseryed seat sale, at cents wiil open Saturday morning. s not Yesterday morning seats were sale for the four nights’ en Murphy at the Boyd, which ‘commences this evening. On Thursday and Eriday evenings Mr. Murphy appears as Larry Don- avan in Fred Marsden's great pl haun Rhue” The Philadeiphia Times suys of Mr. Murphy in this part: Joseph Murphy and cleverest of th put on one of the most natural score of Irish comedians now on the American stage, appeared at the Walnut street theater last night in his famil- far impersonation of the hero in ‘Shaun Rhue’ The play, which is full of interest- ing and sympathetic scenes, was given in ad- mirable style, and a large andience expressed its wppreciation by frequent aud hearty ap- plause,” ctions at tho Boyd next week are, sesday and Wednesday, William new play, “All the Comforts of * which will ~be presented by Charles Frohn company, headed by that popular leading actor, Mr. Henry Miller; and on Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday, Bronson Howard's great war drama, *‘Shei: audoab,” The attr Home | of the Warbennet company WHOLESALE STOCK THIEVES. They Shippsd Cattle by the Oarload From Idaho Ranges to Northern Markats, THRILLING WESTERN NEWS STORIES, Carcless Utah Mine Engineer Risks Ten Men's Lives—-Three Pros- pectors Killea by Hold-Ups ~Railroader Burned, News comes from Pocatello, Taaho, of some bold cattle stealing. It appars that a repre- sentative of Freye & Co., butchersof Seat- tle, appiied to H. H. Rand for cattle, and and was told that his company, the Warbon- net eattle company, had none to scll. Some dnys afterward two carloads of eattle wero driven into the Pocatello yards and loaded and started for Scattle. They were recog- nized as belonging to mostly to the Warbon- net company, while six of them from the herd of William Burke. After 1 gonewestan oficer was tion on the passenger Payette before the cattle reached there to be_tiken out to f, The persons in charge of the stock were arrested and taken back to Bingham ¢ y 1 Cheyenne Bill, the chief of the cowpunchers . who is reported as implicated in this steal, has jumped the country, but there arc some four or five men held, and Rand & Burke are at Blackfoot looking after the prosccution of the thieves, sent in the s train and reached ing Carcless Thres'ers. burning of a fleld of grain was the foundation of the suit of the Boston land and security company and Snyder vs Holman, says the Denver Times, Snyder had leased anch of his co-plaintiff on a basis of shares, to have two-thirds and the company one- tuird. When the harvest of grain had been gathered on September nyder en- i Holmau to_thresh his u with a v thresher. ile the work was in vrogress the gr aught fire from a spark emerging from the muc nd was totally ie plaintifl charged that the con- ation was due tc ence of the defendant in_placing the machine to the windward of the grain, in_falling to provide it with proper appliances for the prevention of sparks and for n handy to )press the endant con- ded that th hine ided with ety reasonable preven inst confla The loss of the grain was due, he , to the fact that intift had 1to furnish u supply zainsy contingencies, which was the custom of all the ranchinen throughout the plaintiffs 1,200, but the defen White Girl W 7. C. Coleman, worth it $400 less, Aded a Mulatto, a mulatto, steward at the Merchants' hotel in Helena, and Mary Leonard, a pretty white girl, were married by Rev. J. C. Rollins, pastor of the Metho- dist chu Coleman is an_intelligent and well bred man, and last summer was head waiter at the Hot Springs hotel, National park. Miss Leonard it to Helena from the cast ubout two ths ago and sought work as a music teacher, Failing in this she aceepted a responsible position in the hotel, where she met Coleman. Both being musi: cians, an intimacy sprungup which blos- semed into love and ripencd into wedlock. The marriage was quietly conducted at tho parsonage and the ne arried couple left r Great Falls on there bridal trip. The rriage created covsiderable talk, but 1ge to say, the negroes professed to be more incensed ‘at it than ere the whites. Coleman is a leader i colored socioty. Sports Scattored. 4 Sheriff McCarthy of Pueblo proposes to stop sparring bouts on Sundays. He made a beginning last Sunday when he, with two deputies, went to o road-house five. miles from town. There a crowd of 100, many of whom were promiuent citizens, was gathered to witness a contest between Robert Dobbs and another negro. The principals had just squared up toone another when the sheriff entered. The fight was turned into a running match, and the wild serambling wus ludicrous. Some men jumped through the window: ying the casings with them. The doors were pulled off their hinges, the stove overturned, whilo numbers of the men were bruised and had their clothes badly damaged. Fully Lalf a dozen men attempted to drive off without un- hitchiug their horses, express and hackmen started out without their loads, and in all di- rections men on foot fled in terror, Sensational Su t When Lewis M. Starr county, California, in 1887, leaving an estate valued at nearly half a mllion dolla young man claiming to be an illegitimate son of the dead man contested the will. Thecase was quite sensational and the contestee was ruled out of court by Judge Gibson. An ap peal was taken to the supreme court, which has been pending for three years, ana now,on motion of the attorneys for both sides, the ap- peal has been dismissed. The basis of set- tlement was that the _young man gets $10,000 of the Starr estate. When the case was tried the contestant produced documentary ovi- dence toshow that he wus the son of Starr and a woman named Bridget Brincy, He is a clerk in a wholesale house in Portland,Ore. A Telegrap Yind, E. A. Street, a telegraph _operator, accorfl- ingto a dispatch from Helena, Mont, 1s 100,000 richer than he was a few weeks ago, but is ulso aware that he has sold millions for that amount. Street works at telegraphy in wintor and prospocta n the sumer. & time ago he located a placer claim i county, Idaho, and bought up adjoining. until ho had 1,600 acres. He reported hisfind to ex-Senator Tabor, who sent ex 10 ex- amine, and on their findings he paid Street £100,000 for his property. It is now reported that the placer - property is worth fully §13 000,000, ettled, died in Alameda or's O1d Block and Chip. “My God, papa, what are you here for?? was the greeting Thomas Maloney, sr., re- ceived from Thomas Maloney, jr., in the Oak- laud city prison one night not long ago. Ma- loney pere was brought inon acharge of drunk aud occupied a cell adjoining that of his son The younger Maloney is awaiting trial on a charize of petit larce * stealingsom sacks of sand from a warehouse of the Remil- lard brick company, aggl had been in prison for some time, Father and soa appeared in the police court together. Murray Won. Tom Murray made u great legal fight in the county court yesterday afternoon against Martin J. Ward, a Chicago hotel broker, who was trying to get 850 of commission * out of him on the plea that he effected the lease of Murray's hotel to Mr. Silloway, Murray won and left the court room about 4 o’clock, the happiest man in Omaha. ‘sed L0 Millions of Homes— 40 Yoars the Btandard, Boils and Pimples Are nature's effortste eliminate poison from the blood. This rekult may be accomplished much more eftectuafly, as well as agrecably through the propes excretory channels, by the use of Ayer's Sarsaparilia. “ For several years I was troubled with boils and earbuncless In casting about for a remedy, it occurredto me that Ayer's Sarsa- parilla had been used in my father's family, with excellent suceess, and I thought that what was good for the father would also be good for the son. Three o four bottles of this medicine entimgly cured me, and 1 have not since — in more ghan two years —had a boil, pimple, or any other eruptive trouble, 1 can conscientiowly speak in the highest tern A and many ¥ ables me to speak inteliigently Hatfield, Farmland, Tnd. Ayer’s Sarsapariila PREPARED BY DR. J.0. AYER & 0O, Lowell, Mess, Price 815 six bottics, 85, Worth §0 & bettle, Drs. Betts & Betts Paysitn, Sucgzons and Specialists, 1400 DOUGLAS STRERT OMAHA, h avorally known spe es. The:r lon, perienc skill and universil su cess in th nt and cure hysicinns ed every wh guire A BtV U sots of early viee nnd the nume ous evils that follow in its t PRIVATE. BLOOD AND specdily, complately permanently cured. NERVOUS DEBIT ND SEXUAL DIS: ORD| leld readily to “their skillful ment PILES, FISTULA AND T AL U guaranteed cured without pm. or detention from business HYDROUELE AND VAR nd successtully cured in 18, GONORRHE Semlual W lthor sox positively curcd, etional disorders that resi it lies or the excess of mutu STRICTI RE Guarant SERICTURE S e without cuttin ) ution effected at home ient without a ment's pain o y 3 TO YOUNG AND MIDDLE AGED MEN. SURE CURE e | effects ot A SURE CURE Gy Shewnith Seings orvanfc weakuess, destroy g both mind and body, with all its dre ded ills. permanently cured, { BETTS Address those who have fm- DRS. BETTS et diimediven tye in: proper indulzenc ary habits, which ruin both mind and body, unfitting thewm for business. study or marri MARRIED MEN or those happy life, aware of physi usslsted. OUR SUCCESS Is based upon favts. First—Practical experl- ence. Second—Every case 1s gpecially studied, thus starting right. Toird — medicines ure prepured in our laboratory eXactly to suit each cuse, thus effecting cures without Injury. Drs. Betts & Betts, 1409 DOUGLAS STREET, - OMAHA, NEB. Dr. CWEN’S ELEGTRIC BELT With Double Wire Suspensory. PATENTED AUG. 16, 1887, IMPROVED IUL‘{ 29, 1899, entering on that debitity, quickly Debility, Costive Disenses. Nery- ling. Sexual Ex ing of body, Dis- oraland Nervous 7=l ness, Kidney =7 e Ousriess, Tremb- = haustion, Was gnsca causod by Fouth, Age, Mar- Life. Buspensory. SENT TO RESPONSIBLE PARTIES FOR CER- TAIN COMPLAL ON 30 DAYS' TRIAL. Also an Electrio Truss and Belt Combined Send Be. postage for YREE illustrated book, pages, which will be sent you in plain sealed envel- ope. Mention this paper. Address Owen Electric Belt & Appliance Co., 306 N. Breadway, St. Louls, Mo. Indiscretions in ried or Slugle 5 GREAT YRADE MARK Ton REM- b unfull- 1o for Sem Wenkness, unterrho otency and all disenses that Tollow as n_se- quence pf e Abuse: s Loss of emory, Univer- Javsitude AFTER TAK! imness of Vision, Premature Old to insanity TRADE MARK A L) Pain in the B Age, and sire to send free by m citic ine ia acid at8] por PICkago, OF alx agos for 86, or will bo sent free by mail oo recelpt of the money, by addressing THE GU()I)MAN DRUG CO., 1110 FARNAM STREET, OMAHA, NEB. On ascount of counterfolts we have adopted the yollow wrappar, the oaly kenuine, LINC IS THE NAME OF THAT Wonderful Remedy That Cures CATARRH, HAY-FEVER, COLD in the HEAD, SORE THROAT, CANKER, Price $1.00. and B!g"_c“ms' Pint Bottles, For Sale by leading Druggists, PREPARED ONLY 1Y Klinck Catarrh & Bronchial Remedy Co. 82 JACKSON ST., CHICAGO, ILL. Blak Br uce &Co. HUNTSVILLE, ALA Charming Win'er Resort in the Hu,hlamls Huntsville Hotel, Substantial, Elegant, New HARVEY . DENISON, Manager BYRON F. DENISON, A nt. ON SOUND FOOTING. ¥ In a few days we intend making extensive alterations and additiong in our Shoe Department, which we hope will prove advantageous both to our putrons and ourselves. This department of our business has grown so rapidly since its beginning that we are forced in spite of our= selves to give it more room. This we intend doing in a very short tima, In the meantime, while preparations are being made for the chang g we will offer special inducements to buyers of Men's footl wear, in order to reduce the stock as much as possible. “The Understanding of Man. A.t $1.25—\Vr‘ will sell a good, strong, substantial Shoe for wm\in;imcn. ? shoe is made with solid sole leather insoles and counters, and is full) equal of “‘shoes in shoe stores” at one seventy-five, At $1 85-—\\'0 will sell Men's Calf Shoes, every day in the y and Boys’ made for solid r for two dollars and a half, At 2 25—\\70 will sell an excellent Sewed Calf Shoe that you'll find worth fully . three dollars in cash, _A_t $2 5 —We will offer a ba “Goodyear Welt,” respect, A-t 2 75—\\'0 will sell a genuine Cork Sole Shoe, made of solid calf stock. This . is a shoe sold all over the country for four dollars and a half. If you want solid comfort in wet weather you can obtain it for two seventy-five, wear, This shoe sellg yain not found every day. This Shoe is a genuing is made of solid calf and fully warranted in every —We will sell youa Shoe made of the Kangaroo. their shoes very best American calf or fing To gentlemen who always pay five or five and a half for we will say: This is the shoe, but the price is different, —We will sellas good a shoe as any man wears. This shoe is made of the very best French Calf; is strictly hand sewed, and is fully the equal of any shoe you'll buy for seven dollars and a half, You simply pay more money but don't get any more shoe. BOY s e li0 RS, At eighty-five cents, one dollar, one forty and one eighty fiv Men’s Rubbers, Men’s Overshoes,Men’sArctics, Men’s Rybber Boots. Boys’ Rubbers, Boys’ Overshoes, Boys’ Arctics, Boys’ Rubber Boots. A "'LI'T'"TLL K AHEAD.S OUR ADVANCE STYLES OF SPRING FHATS ARE HERE. . Nebraska Clothing CO FOURTEENTH AND DOUGLAS STREETS. We close at six thirty. Saturdays, ten o'clock. THE BEST RUBBER BOOTS & SHOES PN ERE SN A AGHER I, ARE MADE BY THE Woonsocket % Rhode Island Rubber Go And we are their western agents and always carryalarestock. Address, American Hand Sewed Shoe Go 1204 and 1206 Harney Street. A California Nerve Foot Makes New sh Blood and Pro- duces vml.. Tempting Bargains | Are being offered with the idea of reducing our stock of Men's Suits, at $12 and $15 We are showing suils that would be considered cheap at a much higher price. Do not fail to visit our Children's Department. It is gaining in_favor each day Cures Anwemia, Scrofl and all Impurities of the Diseases, iy vien Exnay Trembling, Hysl vous Heudache, Loss of Power In either sex, Nervousnoss Wny form. Cold Hands of Esot; Pain'in tho Back aud othier forms of akn: ireulation well as the hanit o, 3he. aha o Ghank t heaith to the shailow cheek. 90K HIRE O NeaDtt dRuld Tah this. wreat Life Ronewar, Try thein, and ou wil jol (10 (iousand . o e, T e Asmann, Wi, Aaily bicsa Dr: Tooh For LA Wreat work 1 tholr bebalr.. They are Sigar-coated. "0 conts & vial, For salo by Duggisis IEDICINE €0, PROPS.. ‘ll RANEISCO, GAL AND PRINCIPAL FAUGAISTS EVERYWHERE. [IB__.E,I};WBT'_S KERVE AND BRAIN THEATMENT goeeifo for Hystarta, eBtrens, Kioncal b Filting in insaaity doath, Premature 0! {iolthor sax, nvolu 5 e by vereortty of the Brain! s Srerinaylence Each box coniainytuym e R, GF alx for B0, sant by M prepaid. I cath ‘order, for B Doxes, Wil send parcHAME 0 to refund money If the treatment falls W0 N O OU RE! NO PAY Guarantees lssved and genwine sold ouly by « GOODMAN DRUG CO., 1W0Furnam Stresth = » Omaba Neb. r DR. BAILEY o At 1816 Douglas Street, Omaha, Neb. A Full Set ot Testh on_ Rubber, for graduato in A Privito Ils bring the Vays Douiaus, Apertect fit guaranteed. Teoth extractod without pain. oF agor ang, Wl oul ey thetios Gold and r fillings Iu ‘.‘_ rates — Bridge ind Crown Work ~ Teoth wit outplates All work wa ranted OFFICE PAXTON BLOCK, 16TH AND FARNAM Hin e e o | TFOR MEN | YOUWEAKMARI e | Fears, Evil Thoughta, TO WEAK MEN: e e = % Varlcotele, Losess o ¢ manhood, Eeventaen years experienc the greatest w8, a1l 08t Manh Skin wnd 1, Mol riny Jurs-9a. w, to¥ 014 Men, Wowk M ddle aged men, Prom turcly ola’ Young Men, bring back sprin " sireby use of Nerve Boans, They correct | youth's errors, cure all nerve troubles. #1box Pory o KX boxe Nerve Bean Co, Buffalo, N, Y* | Ei )1y by Goodman Drug Co,, 1110 Farn Quinbi rYOusD My e n vable ! mu‘uur 't Sniea A splendid medical work ; she A e e ome " &4 0o he J Prof. 'F.t."lrré\"v‘l.'l"m. Moodus, Conn uffalo, N. ¥. You HOOK HEALTH! w St