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SMOTHERED ~ THEIR ~ CHILD. Albright Parents Urconecionsly Kill Their Bleoping Infant. NEWS OF A DAY AT SOUTH OMAHA. Deed of an Unnatural Son—Drove a Horse to Death--Demands of the City Police Force. During the recent cold weather Mr. and Mrs, Petton of Albright have taken their in- fant child to bed with them and let it slee between them, They did this as usual Sat- urday night and when they awoke yesterday morning they were horrified to discover that their baby was dead. There was every in- dication that the child hud been smothered 10 death, The aistorted little features, open mouth ana discolored face told the tale, The parents are f-stricken over the affair as either one or the other had uncon- sciously killea the chila whilo they were asleep by tossing the bed clothes over its face and vressing the same down until the baby was unable to breathe, Mrs, Patton is a'daughter of Mr. McArdle of McArdle precinet. Driven to the Poor House. Judge Lovi of this city tells a bhard about one M. Levinson, who he says runs a grocory store on South Thirteenth street, The judge alleges that Levinson invited his aged mother to leave Russia and comoe to this country und live with him. She accepted » invitation. After being hiere a short time mother was taken sick, and Levinson to leave his homo and go to live with her brother, who is a rag picker in this city. This brothor of the woman is 50 poor he can barely keop himself from starv tion, and being old and feeble in adai tion, he found himself unavle to provide for his sister. He there- fore took the sick woman back to her son, who is in comfortable circumstances and teld bim that it was his duty to see tha his aged and sick mother was properly take care of. Instead of taking her in, Lovinson drove her to the poor house aud turned her over to the mercies of public ebarity Judge Levi, who knows all the persons concerned, is very indignant over the matter and nas written a letter to Poormaster Ma- honey statiug the facts in the caso and de- manding that_ the woman be returned to hier son_and that he be forced to support her, as the law provides, story olice Want a Safe, Tho polico oficers wonder why the city cannot afford a small safo at the polico sta- tion to keep tho valuables taken from pris- oners. Captain O'Hara today smd: “It will be a matter of economy in the end to have a safo, and a cheap ouc will answer the purpose. According to tho present state of affairs there 1s no security whatever for the valuavles taken from prisoners. They are simply locked up in u drawer. As the jailer bas to patrol the N street beat, what is there to hinder some thief from sneaking into the station, brenking open the drawer and taking the money and other articles of value thereia, “There arc times when such a haul would buy three or four safes. Of courso the eity would havo to make good the 10ss to tho prisoners. Iu case of fire it would be just the same. They £aid for the Horsc Edward C iday and Charles Raidy drove Peter Persons’ horse to death, passed the night in the city jail. The horse had been hired by a gentleman named Hayke, who left the animal tied while he entored an N street “grocery” to transact some busi- ness. While ho” was insido Cassiday and Raidy unfastened the horse without permis- sion and drove through the city at a furious rate until the animal fell and broke its neck. Both fellows were arrested last night, This morning they decided that the choapest way out of the difficulty was to ay for the horse. Mr. Persons was satisfied to settle the mat- ter that way and Police Judge King dis- missed the prisoners. They Will Dance. ‘The employes of the tin shop and canning department of Cudahy's packing depart- ment will give a dance at Blum’s hall Christ- mas eve. AL the meoting held Saturday evening a social organization was formed with the fellowing oficors: H. A. Munroe, president: A. J. Mallon co president; R. 1. Anderson, secrotary; William Rubin, treasurer; Otto Custer, manager. Commit- tee—Fred Keeler, Kirby, Isaac Mills, John Agenistein, M, Connors, A. Munroe, William Rubin, Otto Custer, Id Custer, R. . An- derson. et No gripplng, no nausea, no pain when Do- Witu's Little Early Risors are takon. Small Pl Safe pill. Bost pill. A et UL SIR BOYLE ROCHI The Man to Who the Best of the “irish Bulls” Are Credited, The mention of the name of Sir Boyle Roche, says the Bolfast Telegraph, will at oneo bring to mind the [rish bull, for no other man ha oined more bulls than the renowned Boyle, and pos- sibly none othor has kept the house in such perpetunl roars of laughter at his follies. He held the office of Gentleman Usher at the Irish court, and discharged his duties to the sutis- faction of every one with whom his functions brought him in coutact, There 15 a harvest of drollery to be gleaned from his speeches in the house at v. ous times, and more especially woro | bon mots entertaining for the reason thut he himself wus often very carnest and heated in his remarks, and was un- conscious of the bathos ho was giving utterance to. “What, Mr, Speaker,” said he on one oceasion, *“and so we are to boggar ourselves for fear of ve posterity! Now, 1 would ask the honc able gentloman and this most honor- able house why wo should put ourselves out of the way to do anything for p terity, for what has posterity dono ' for us? The orator after ‘this dec- luration, expecting loud applause from his own pacty, extremely discon- certed to tind the whole house 'in a burst of laughter at his remark, so he began to explain that “he assured the house that by postority ho did not at all mean our ancestors, but thoso who wero to come immediatoly after them.” 'This explanation convulsed tho house, and nothing ious was done for hall an hour. Sir Boylo was vory indignant at the proccedings of the Parisian Jacobins, and on one oc- casion he thus aired his indignation and contempt of them: *‘If we once permit- ted the villainous French Musons to meddle with the buttresses and walls of our ancient constitution, they - would never stop nor stay, sir, till they had brought the foundation stones tumbling down about the ears of the nation, 1f theso Gallican villains should invade us, tis on that ta- ble, maybe, these honorable mem bers might see their own destinies lyin in a heap atop of ono another. Here, sorhaps, sir, the Marshalluw (Marseils aiso) men would break in, cut us in mincoment, and throw our heads bloed- ing on that table to stare us in the fuce,” One of his famous union speeches con- cluded with this pithy remark, that “this excellent union will convert our parren hills into fruitful valle) In another speech, directed against the Jacobins and Jacobin intrigue, Sir Boyle angrily exclaimed: “'Sir, 1 smel! a rut, I see him brewing in the air, but mark me, Mr, Speaker, I shall yot'nip him in the bud,” " Hearing that Admiral Howe was in search of the French, ho re- marked that he trusted *‘we would sweep tho Gallic flect off the face of the carth.” He expressed his loyalty in one speech by ®he sublime utterance: *'I stood prostrate at the feot of my sovereign,’ 1o also held up to the ridicule of the house *‘the man who turned his back on imself,” He lamented ‘‘tnat single misfortunes never came alone, and that vhe greatest of all possible mis- fortunes is generally followed by a .7 Sir Boyle was married to a daughter of Sir Richard Cave. This wife of his evidently seemed bent on schooling her husband, for she com- pelled him daily to read Gibbon's *‘De- cline ana Fall of the Roman Empire” for style. Sir Boyle was so cruelly pun- ished by this that he often stigmatized the storian as a ‘“‘low fellow, who ought to have beea kicked out of com- puny wherever he for turning peop! thoughts away from their prayers and their politics, to what the devil himself could make neither head nor tail of i Use Haller's Barb Wire horses, it never fails to cure cuts, aud old sores, pe -~ BEET SUGATR, Liniment for wounds nation About the Product and the Bounty The annual report of the United States internal revenue commissione just isguc refers to the beet sugar in- dustry as follows *“T'he bounty granted to the manufac- turers of sugur under the act of Octobor 1, 1800, the admission free of duty of beet sugar machinery until 1, 1802, and the encouragement gi the Department of Agriculture in experiments for the benefit of farmers, and the aid given by different states, will doubtless have the effeet of stimu- lating the industry is count In 1887 we produced in this countr, the sugar beet 400,000 pounds of sugar, in 1888 about 8,600,000 pounds, and in 1889 about 6,000,000 pounds. In 1890 three factories in this country (two in California and one in Neb 1) Dro. duced about 8,000,000 pounds. Three additio faetc Lhave been est lished during the last year and it estimated that th, production this year will be about 25,000,000 pounds, “T'here 1,000 ac of beets planted in Nebraska last ye Utah and 6,000 in Cali very 1 d producer of sugar from beots, sorghum or sugar cane is required to provide at his own expense a book, in y shall bo entored daily the q tity of material used for the ~production of sugar, the quantity of juice obtained and its average density, the quantity of sirup purchased and its average density with name and address of persons from whom_purchased, the number of hours the mill was in operation, the g of sugar in pounds of each grade pro- duced and packed, with the number and kind of packages, and the serial number of the same; the quantity of sugar ship- ped, sold or removed for storage, con- sumption ov sale and the namo of the person to whom shipped, sold or disposed of. “ILa planter or farmer sclls the cane which he has vaised, or the sirup which he has produced, at any period before the manufacture of sugar is compioted, he will have no right to the bounty on the completed product, The party purchasing such cane or sirup and mak- ing the sugar will be entitled to the bounty upon compliance with the re quirements of the regulation. 1If, how ever, the planter or farmer takes hi cane or sivup to a sugar factory and has it made into sugar for his own account, rotaining owncrship and paying to the factory u toll for the manufacture, he is then = the sugar producer = and entitled to the bounty. - The cen- tral factorvies which work sirup into sugar, on account for other parties who produce the sirup and retain owner ship, are treated and considered as a part of the sugar factory of the licensed sugar producer and ure subject to the sime rules and regulations in regurd to notices, books, ete. ms for bounty will be made on and presented to the col- ‘nul revenue, accompanied with the certificates of the inspector and of the weigher for verification. They will be sent by the collector after ation to the commissioner of in- ternal revenue, and if allowed by the commissioner they will be forwarded to the proper ounting officer of tho treasury, taking the usual course of claims “upon the government. After final allowance drafts upon the treasury will be issued in payment, which will be mailed or delivered to the persons en- titled thereto. Interesting Infi The best and cheapest Car- by the Bordon& Selleck € With it one man can arter is olds hicago Iil.% nove u 10aded ear, Training of College Women. Harper’s Bazar: [ have said that I have seen college women fail in the commercial world, using the term to cover the giving of work for which money is paid. There comes to mind now a beautiful morning in the y fall, when u card of introduction wus handed tome inmy offico, intro- ducing a graduate of the Harvard Anuex, and of Girton eollege. Had I been asked before this experience whether it were possible fov a woman to fail with such an equipment, 1 would have unhesitatingly answered *No,” The bearver of this ard shortly appeared, There was not one indied- tion in her dress or manner of her educational advantages bung that began at the of her head, so cut that it minded you of torraces, extended to her oyebrows, completely covoring her fore- head. A hat many sizes too small for a woman of her height was on her head. Her dress was too short and the braid was worn off; two buttons were off her wnd her handkerchief in the open- did not hide the fact of their absence, When she sat down I unconsciousl moved my chuir to muke room for he She told her story. She could find noth- ing to do. She lind been teaching, but did not like it. She wanted other work, No immigrant had move vague ideas of what she wanted to do than t woman, She thought she could do newspaper work; was sure she could write edi- ls. She wanted to get into a ne paper office. It took all the self-com- mund [ had to rvefrain from saying ‘There is not an oflice in the country, that woutd shelter that bang.” 1 in- wardly groaned. My dream that a col- lege education wus the protection of women against just such experiences as hers was dispelled. No widow with five children and a district school education faced the world more helplessly. Hoer mind was a great mass of dough, un- shaped and unshapable until had passed through the fir The girl who comes out of college with no sense of proportion, no eye for color; no sense of the fitness of things, no knowledge of the present conditions of the world of which, from her stundpoint, she forms 80 lurge a part, will need another train- ing—that of painful experience-~to fit her to use the tools given by her alma mater, “Listed,” as the brokers say,t 100 dosesof no dollar,”’ Hood's Sarsaparilia is always t air equivalent for the price, — - Sarah Bernhardt recently said of can girls: “They are pretty, chic sty lish, ‘I'hoy dress much better than lish women, but I cousider the 3 woman the best dresser of all. Such bon- ne ‘Cbe girls of your country are very bright—'smart,’ as vou call them. They bave such iberty ! They see everything, To wo the American girl1s a delightiul study.” - — Constipation poisons the blood; DeWitt's Little Early Risors cure counstipation, The causo rewoved, the disease Is gone, Awmeri- and THE OPENING VELASCO'S HARBOR. The Ocming Croat Oommercial Ceater on the Gulf Coast, PEOPLE THERE NOW. OVER 2,000 Velasco is Only 100 D.ys Old, but She s an xceedingly Healthy Infant for All That. AB Mr., F'r reporter lnst night called on nk Lerch and gained from him the following additional facts coneern- ing the I Harbor on tho Texas coas re is no dou’ uid Mr. Lerch, ‘that Ve i a short time will be only the great commercial conter on the guil coast, but will rank among the largest cities in the southwest. For 20 years deep water on the gulf coast has been the great desidera- tum of the whole west. The peo- ple have met in conventions to deliberate upon and to aiscuss this problem. They have patitioned, begged and demunded of congress large appros priations to be used in different harbor entrances, All government work hith- erto_has failed to accomplish any per- ceptible improvement. Two yea ago western capital, western enterprise and energy commenced to grapple with this great question. The mouth of the Brazos (Brazos de Dios, Avm of God) as the Jesuit fathers called this noble river, was selected. The work done by the Brazos River and Dock Co. will prove this viver to be indeed the arm of God, upholding the commerce and agri- culture of the great west. The jotties designed t have been built, nearly $2,000,000 have been expended, but not one cent of it v government money. Big ships drawin from 15 to 17 feet ‘have repeatedly on- tered the harbor and demonstrated that deep water had at last been ob- taived on the Texas coast. The company announced that they would * never offer or sell a foot of ground until deep water had been obtained. On July 1, they laid out the City of Velasco. The fame of deep wate had gone abroad; to satisfy the clamor of the people they commenced selling lots on July 11th in alternate blocks at private salé reserving every othor bl to be sold at public auction when ra road connections, hotels, wharves and facilities for business had been pro- vic Though only one hundred day old, the growth of the town has phenomenal. Velasco today has over 2,000 inhabitants, large numbers of two- story houses substantially built, hotels, lectrie light, business houses of ali de- seviption and, i fac thing that Zoes to make up an enterprising town. VELASCO HARBOR OPENING. On the 15th day of December there will be a grand rejoicing at Velusco. The public opening of the harbor will be celebrated by the inhabitants of the new city. Everyone whocomes will have an opportunity to satisfy himself as to the depth of the water over the bar. It is proposed to take all visitors in great ships through the jetties to the blue ocenn and give them an opportunity convince themselves that deep the basis of commercial gr at Velasco, Tex., is a not a promi On the days following the harbor opening, December 16 and 17, the public auction will be held. Ewv other block of nsco has heen reserved to be sold at this time. ach visitor will be enabled to invest according to his means. Lots range from $100 upward, sold on ensy terms and all will have an opportunity to partake of the benefits of deep water 5 const, Velasca Commercial club, Ve- sco, Tex., will be pleased to answor all inquiries. There is no doubt that the bulk of the export and import trade of the groat west will go throuzh the new port of Velasco. It is on the average 565 miles neaver to the producing regions of the great west than the Atlantic ports. It will, therefore save to the furmer an average of 124 cents per bushel upon all grain export. The climate of Velasco is salubrious. Constantly fanned by an invigorating gulf breeze: the temperature ravely reaches over 90 in the summ nor does it go helow 40 iu the winter. The low excursion rates that have been obtained put it in the reuch of all to takea trip to the sunny southland. Remember the date of the Velasco Harbor opening is De- cember 15, 1891, The public ° December 16 and 17. Should you wish for further information apply “for oxcursion rates and advertising matter to the ticket agents of the Burlington or Missouri Pacific roads Be sure and buy your tickets by the Sunta e route, which will give you an opportunity to visit the princ ies of Kuansas as well as those of Texus. Tickets good until June 1st, 1892, with stop over privileges, 30 days in each di- rection, Mr. Corthell A Prevetive for Croup. We want overy mother to know that croup can be prevented. True croup never appears without a warning. Tho first symptom is hoursoness: then tho child appears to have taken a cold or a cold may have accompanied the hoarseness from the start. After that & peculinr rough cough is developed, which is followed by the croup. The time to act is when the child first becomes hoarse; a few doses of Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy will provent the attack. Even after a rough cough has appeared tha dis rented by using this remedy a L It has never been kng ceut, 50 cont and §1 ottles for sale by druggists, = ~ piano. New s Sold on ale. New installments. Wegman tuning device. Hayden Bro — Small in size, great in results; DeWitt's ittlelSarly 1¢'soes . Best pill for constipa- tion, best for sick headache, best for sour stomach, —~— Something New in Corn Culture. Dr. W, H. H. Dunn,whose magnificent farm of 2,560 acres adjoins the northeast- ern suburbs of the city of Lincoln, has demonstrated the practicability of an entirely new method in the cultivation of weedy corn and it will doubtless be of interest to farmer who of it. One of the doctol ever learns ! ornfields the past soason compriseds a steip of about 100 acres. arly half of this field was on low land, and after it had been culti- vated once the constant rains made it impossible to at it again, OMAHA DAILY BEE: MONDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1 while the sunflowers and weeds sprang up luxuriantly med by July they had outgrown the corn and ~complotely hidden it I'he doctor did not expect to get even a nubbin from the field, but remember- ing that in his beyhood days the stalks which tho horse nipped or trampled at he end of the rows invariably produced the best corn, he ‘decided totry the ex- periment of running a mower through the field and cut ‘down both weeds and corn. He could mot raise any corn as the weeds were and he decided that he had nothing Lo loss anyway. He therefore got out three of his mowers, fixed wheols at the end of the sickles about six inches above the ground. He then had three of his men drive these machines through the corn, The novel spectacle attracted attention both from farmers and other persons and all the time it was going on there was a string of wagons and bug gies halted on the r during the un usual method of cultivating the corn. All had some inquiries to make and all invari IvII_\' declared vhat the corn would be killed. It had been the intention of the doctor to endeavor to cultivate his corn again but the constant rains forbade this and he never vas able to get into it. The corn grew as it never did before, It outstripped the ds and developed splendid e The strip averaged about forty-five bushels to the acre and the experiment has attracted consia ble attention from the farmers in adjacent section, T kg s Commendable, All claims not consistent with the high character of Syrup of Figs are purposely avoided by the Cal. Fig Syrup Company. 1t ucts gently on the kidneys, liver and boy cleansing the systom effectually, but it is not acure-all and makes no pretensious tha every bottle will not substantiate, the Four hundred and fifty Warranted sovon yours Now seale. Hayde dotlar p for 8187, Swindled in Chicago. Detroit Free Pr We had been talking ina gene in the smol- ing car, when an oldish man with a very innocent expression of countenance su denly turned and said: ientlemen, I’ve bin sort o’ around Chicago for three or four b and [ Izinder imagine T ot swindled in buyin’ a watch. Here it is, and I wish you'd look at it and pive me your opinions. I haint traveled around much, and I don’t know many of the tricks of a big, bad city, but I hate to think I don’t know ’nuff not to bite at a swindle. Jest look it over and tell me what you think.” It scemed to be a gold works scemed to be all right, but the fivst man who tools it in hand investi- gated for a mement or two and said: **Well, old man, if you paid more than for that thing you've been bitten.” hev, eh? That'’s about what I had concluded.” “I'should say,” observed the second man, after a thorough investigation “that if I had my ehoice between a $20 bill and this w: ['d take the bill. I've seen better ones at 18 hat’s your opinion?” g looking tch, and the ked tne old “If you to know i “I do.” “Well, sir, Tused to be agent for a factory in Conneeticut which turned out better looking watches than this at $8 apicee to the trade “For the land sake ped the old man, and he settled buck in his seat and looked so heart broken that no one felt like saying anything more to him. An hour later, when [found him alone and apparently in better spirvits, I sat down beside him and asked “How much did you r that watch, anyhow?” He pulled out his wallet, hunted out bill, which was from the best jewelry house in Chicago, and showed me the figures. The price of the watch tha guarantee on the bill ve been swindled you want dly pay for been in the watch trade myself for thirty-two he chuckled, as I returned the ““But what was your object? “Just to prove to myself over again that boy likes to believe that else has been taken in aad done for, and t not one manintwenty kno: half what he things he kno especially about a watch, Mr. Gladstone Forgets his political perplexities long enough to write tor The Youth's Companion. will describe a_young inventor of and lofty charac The Co f only American weekly for which Mr. Glad- stone writes. A e Dr. Cullimore, consulting oculist and aurist of the Missouri Pacifle lway, is well settled in T Bowie's Pamous Blude, . Among the relics of Colonel John R. Davis of Mississippi, who died in Cin- cinnati recently, is the original Bowie knife. Davis was a cousin of Jeff Davis, and during the war was the coloncl of a Mississippi regiment, known as the Tigers. Bofore the war he was a prom- inent citizen of Vicksburg, where na boat and shipping supply es lishment, with branch houses both N Orleans and 1tehe He w: weanlthy and w large sluve-owner, having several plan ons, while *“Davis land,” below Vicksburg, was his prop- erty, und still bears his name, Colonel Davis had in his possession the original knife constructed for Colo- nel Jim Bowie, who, though a native Kentuckian, moved to Texas and mar- ried the daughter of -Governor Berrymenda. The knife was smd to have heen invented while Colonel Bowie was confined to his bed in Natchez suffering from the-elfects of a wound he had received in a border fray. Bowie was o man of great mechanical ingenuity, and whittled it out of white pineasa model for a hunting knifo, which he sent w0 two brothe named Blackmun, in the)City of Natchez, and told them to spare no expense in making it. It was made from a awmill file, and afterward perfected by an Arkansas blacksmith., Davis, who was u young man at the time, was present the first time the kuife ted was used in a duel, and, as herdescribed the e, the parties cut the underbrush down and fought to the death, The peculiar part of the knife was that the end waspo is- oned, an operation that cost Colonel Bowie $10. e Complexion powder is an_absolute noces- | sity of the refined toilet in this climate, Poz | zonul's combines every element of beauty Mean- | and purity. PRICE'S g Bakin g in every dollar the plac the famc grew,an and we west. ment on kind Shoe.” paid for bers for left) For sprai nd quic 50 cents a b eure or pre NO CURER Spermatorrho to cure. Con: them for a great deal | —$1— shades, in all si to two dollars in every store that's got ‘em, at a dollar a garment, value we've been able to show this scason. Instantly stops the m ov any external pain, a few applici ing the pain to instantly stop. For congestions, ralgia, lumbago, seitic peated applleations aye 1 spasmis, nausea, fainting sell Many years’ experlence. ontest success all Nervous, Chronle and Private Diseases. b Sore: *Conguitacion tre """nlf.:mm-ununt LAf¢) sont free. Offioe hours—ya. m. to8 p. m. Sunday 1 tablishment in a small corner on our second floor. which was made for us direct by leading manufacturers and which we were able to guarantee We began to sell shoes as we sold everything else, at a small profit, making twenty-five and fifty cents where the regular shoe man raade from one to three and even four way. It didn't e to get us peach d of shoes give it more room, moved it where we are do- Although the two shoes that ‘‘good focting, The them) or new shoes, Aside from sl the man out doors Today we place on sale in our furnis s 128 dozen splendid fine heavy wool underwear, in brown, tan, es, beautifully ting pains; n ns, hr acie, painin pains in the sm cssar ¢ cured by rdly 2 hottle venti king inw y druggis on, Lost Manhood, Seminal Weakness, ary Organs. N. sultation free. W ADY RELIEF! FOR PAIN ver fi tions, 1L in sneis, sieeple With RADWAY 1 NO OWNS 1818 Douglas Street, Omaha, Neb. A regular gradunte In medicie as diplomas show. POPULAR PRICED SHOES. A long time ago, as we count things out west, we opened a shoe department in our es- We opened it with a class of footwear take long for people to find out that oxr shoe shop was good *“understanding,” we sold a “'slew, until finally it out to our ing today the commodious and trade in this scen by “Johnny Jones and his sister Sue,” compelling us, from she ew the second floor quarters entirely, ba reatest shoe ment business in entire department, like it grew, it necessity, to room, p we carry all sorts of shoes for all sorts of men, have more than any others p'aced this depart- sold in the city, are our “Two-fifty Goodyear Welt,"” e shoes, we say to you, are right in Y you wear them you've got any cause to kick at your them to us and we will remedy any fault with either cash all They come in all sizc of toes and lasts, in either lace or congress, and are such that men troubled with corns have pair of them. pers for the man in the house, and Overshoes been known 10es, we carry a to smile Need we men- (8 money than you'd hing goo finished goods; = @8 Lo give ease Lo the sufferai. the chest or sid:s, healachie, toothache, rubped on by hand, act like magic, caus- Mammationsy, rhewnatism, nea- nall of the back, mo-e extended and re- al pains, diarchey, dyseatary, eolie, sness, are relievod instantly in hall a tumbler of water, PILLS therc ho better to 60 drops PAY stlll roating mith the A permanent cure guaranteed for Catarrh Impotency, Syphilly, Stricture, and al it Losao o 2:0) for every case | undertake nnd fuf B. 1 guaraut, IS CA which settles leading to th And it negle speodily. A vanies 1. 1 tainly curo it Which and i DR SCH eases of the DF pald on T 5 rantee b Telepone 10 At fit. Teoth bridge work, publi - sIPowder: Used in Millions of Homes—40 Years the Staudard, Teeth All filllngs warrant and. for all disea; should be in every home. Dr.J .E.McGREW THE NOTED SPECIALIST in tho trentment of all forms of PRIVATE DISEASES. 17 yoars oxperienco. Gl or ity or pain in relievin 1 and Sking N eases of the Blood of Manhood and A Despondent, Disco business. The me for the treatment of the nbov tho despondent bocomo cl and Courage. My unsurpassed, ALl circulars and au USED BY A COLD alr tubes ining of inflames the 1t 15 the b in and o Lur Bronchial Consumption Shiarp, fe cou b alie 1t in time and you can cer- with SCHENCK'S PULMONIC SYRUP. is Without an Equal for BRONCHITIS ' loading up to neluding consumption. ENCK'S new book on Dis- » Lungs, Liver and Stomach, Sent f] 205 & SON, Philadelpeis, Fa. GENUINE MICROBE KILLER 1 KIDD'S GERM ERADICATOR ponusa 1 klily 1lod In Curos v g an 8 slzes, the lntter 2ig i alpt of pr cure. The by th ublio unt Kinsior Drad Comy H ward Moyors an i b A D! Foster. and M The Leadinz DENTIST, ™ Third Floor Paxton Blo 085, 16th and Farnam Sts, set of teetl, on rubber, for 85 Perf plates o removable thing for sinzers wad without just the speakers, never drop dowa. Extractad Without Pain, at reasonablo rates, all Cut tuls out for & gulde. work ¢ discharges; Strictura tho Bladder; Byphilix and all Dis. rvousness, ( il Dobility, Loss mibition, Want of Lifo and Vitality, Bad Momory, wed. Reliof obtained withont 10s of tino from st powerful remedios known rn el diseascs, Tl ful from ro rerources and fucilitios fo i Diikinoss ¢ pondenco strictly p . Writo for torn tion list. 14th and Farnam Sts., Omaha, Neb. Gleot and all anno; OPTICAL NEW HOUSE OF TiE ALOE & PENFOLD €0, Practical Opticians tablish- Boat s othod 1y ] ment of A. 8. Aloe & Co., perlor to all others Bot weary or tIre tho eyes. fustad to the face. Byeos Tosted Free of Charge. Prices Low for Firstclass Good THE ALOF 114 S 15th St., next door to Creighton Block. JOSEPH GILLOTT'S STEEL PENS. GOLD MEDAL, THE MOST PERFECT OF PENS. MEDY FRE pt Relle! Lasting Cure PARIS EXPOSITION, 1889, E REMEDY, red Care and which more men are wearing than are wearing any other six and our ‘‘Three-nincty Dress way, and if after return (the amount you w.dths, all sty les comfortable fitters after trying on a full Arctics and tion it? We of Slip- Rub- sell pay anywhere else, econd lilac, counter heliotrope and pear] goods that are being sold at a dollar and a half Without doubt the best 8 department, (s on the ADELINA in the murket. T B. Moore, for yeurs past beel, lioukne You have ove I ¢he it and be Decatur,I11., PATTI (¢ Is The Best Tiy vinced TURNER-FRAZER MERCANTILE CO | Sole Western Agents, St. Joseph. Mo, ' MOORE'S 0F 10¢ con~ LIF have with bile s and tendeucey to kidney trouble, e of Life is the only remedy [ found that gave entire relief, fully recommend it to those who may be suffering from kindred discases. ix-Memt Moore's Treo of Life. and Liver Compl nt and Ay L0 8 T0r Wian YO 'ree of Life. tao Ure ABEL 1L Logisluture. « positive Y uslog Moora's Seal Skin Garments, FUR CAPES. Palmer Hou 1arly doca; 1% e full particulars for | A splendid al work man who FYous & FProL ¥, C, FOWL MEN'S FUR OVERCOATS. and All Fashionable & FURS CLOTH AND PLUSH CLOAKS BarSond for Fashion Hook malled free. JOHNT. SHAYNE& CO. Rellable Manufacturers Block. 191 4193 State 8t., Chicago. T0 WEAK M Soff fiveis of st 1 aih contgining £ chargo, ad by every