Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, February 6, 1892, Page 8

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE:?SATURDAY FEBRUARY R Wil DENY THEIR DEMA Union Pacifio. Officials Will Reject the Olaims of the Trainmen, DS CAN'T STAND AN INCREASE OF WAGES Members of the Grievance Committee Ifave Taken Thelr Case to Their Grand Officors and General Man ager Clark, "The conference botween Assistant General Manager Dickinson of the Union Pacific and the joint grievance committee ropresenting tho Order of Railway Conductors and the protherhood of Railroad Trainmen wasshort and inconclusive. A press committee ap. pointed by the employes makes the fullowing statement: 'he committee called on Mr, Dickinson at the appointed hour and was kept waiting thirty minutes bofore gaining an audience. The committeo last week submitted a new schedulo of wages, and at the conference Mr. Dickinson mude & statement purporting to give the aggregate increaso of wages under the proposed schedule, According to his own statements his figures were based on the scrvice of threeof the busiest months of the year. Caroful esti- mates made by the committee indicate that the aggregate increase will not exceed 60 per cent of the sum named by the assistant gen eral manager. “The committes proposed discussing the now schedule article by article, but Mr. Dickinson positively refused to entertain a proposition for an increase of wages untilthe schedule was withdrawn, That wouid have left tho committee without a cause. Will Appeal to Clark, “Its membvers felt aggrioved atthe scant courtesy shown them as the representatives ot two great organizations of railroad men, and they laft Mr. Dickinson resolved to ap- peal to General Manager S. H. H. Clark. Tolograms havo been sentto K. E. Clark, grand chief conductor of the Order of Rail- way Conductors, and S, E. Wilkinson, grand master of the Brotherhood of Kailroad Train- men, and they have started for Omaha. Gen- oral 'Manager Clark has also been wired, and we expect he will meot our grand oficers in this city next week.'" Members of the committees think a confer- ence with the general manager will bo roncted by next Wednesday. At ono timo Mr. Clark was expected in Omaha this weok, but it was given out at his office yesterday that ho contempluled a trip south from St. Louis, and the date of his arrival in this city was said to be very uncertain. The commttces are confident that Mr. Clark will promptly respond to their call to come to Omaha, but thoy will vouchsafo no reason for their faith boyond smiling assurances that they “know he will be here.’ One of tho grand officers who have been ealled to the assistance of tho committees was in Baltimore and the other in New Hampshire when wired, but both started westward yesterday. Feel Rather Sore, The committees doprecato all talk of a otrike, but they express a firm determination to bave their complaints heard and dis- cussed. They are angered by Mr. Dickin- son's curt reception, even more than their statoment inaicates. They particul: y sent a sarcastic remark of his about ‘giving tho road to the men and peing done with it.” Vico President Kimball was called to the conference by Mr. Dickinson, but _took no part in the discussion. When tho chagrined emploses got up to go he asked one of them 1f thoy had adjourned. “No,” was the response, “we have simply unbitched, as they did 'in tue Nebraska legislaturd last wintor.” The new schedule submitted by the con- ductors and brakemen proposes a quito gen- eral increase of wages, Mr. Dickinson said in his lotter to the committees that he would not entertain such a proposition, and_at the conference he asserted that the aggregate Incronse was so largo his company could not atand it. Grievances Admlttea, A railroad man who has an_ofiicial connec- tion with the Uulon; Pacific, with inside sources of information, says: “Undoubtedly thero are a great many apparent irrégularities and somo of them aro likely to Yo cor- rected, but the committces propose changes that mean & large increase in wages, and most of these will be denied. Indirectly the brotherhood of engincers 1s a remote cause of some of the dissatisfaction among the train- men, and there seems to bo considerablo jeal- ousy between the two classes of employos, “Hore is an agreoment the engineers got out of the company in April, 1857, exhibit- ing little four-page teaflet, ‘“‘and you will obscrye that some important concessions wore mado to them, For example, when a train is delayed or laid up during its run be- yond a fixed margin the engineer is allowed for such lost time at the rate of one-tenth of 8 day’s run for each hour. Hero is an engi- peer gottng &85 per hundred miles run on ‘a standard dlocomov.ivcl:‘k \Vll]l‘:-; is sidefed a day’s work, &n he «;%Wawaé i¢ dGuts por hour for ovor- time. An engincer on & mogul gets $4.15 per 100 miles and 424 cents per hour for ovor- time. 3 “In the case of conductors and brakemen it is different, A dispatcher may sidetrack, a train for hours, but the train crew get no pey for the lost time, Thoy aro paid accord- ng to the number of miles run. The train- men would be less \}\ o human 1f l‘iny did Tol complain of unfal® treatment, The in- justico of this rule is so glaring is is hard to Bce how the company can with any show of reason rofuse to give the trainmen a square deal on that point at least. “firemen are also favored by the compa- nies, and it is ono of the complaints of the conductors that the man who merely shovels coal intothe firebox often earns bigger wages than a superior who s responsible for tho handling of a whole train, The enginoers have succeeded at successive conferences in keoping tho agreement of 1887 in force, and that aggravates the trainmon, The engi- heers’ grievancecommittee bad a forty-seven day session last September and October and went homo satistiod. The conductors avd brakemen uaturally feel that thoy are boing iscriminated against Question of Runs, “Ope of the most 1mportant points to bo considered by Mr. Dickinson is a demand that on mountain divisions eighty miles instead of 100 shall bo considered a day's work. The traiumen argue that the work is barder on mountain runs than on the plains, and they assert that they are asking no more than has been granted on the Denver & RRio Grande and other mountain lines, 'This proposition means an increase of 25 per cent in wages on the divisious affected by it, and it is a foregone conclusion that Mr. Dickiuson will not make the change. “I'he committees have called attention to the fact that in many cases there are two and even threo engine crows on & run covered by one train crew. They complain that this is unfair to the latter, aud they want a remedy. In somo cases the crews Of fast traius run veral buudred miles but are allowed no ore than they would for a slow run of 100 miles consuming the same time, The train- mwon insist that there is more danger d & greater strain on he fast run and there ought to be & higher rate of pay. *On ‘the new line between Denver and Fort Worth there 18 a number of grievances, risli.g perbaps out of the change from the old management to the Union Pacific. One of the complaints Is that the men have not ‘been properly credited with overtime. *‘The au element among trainmen who are always ready for a shinaig and talk strike, but the conservatives are in the as- cendent. They realize, too, that tho engi- noers, having no grievance, would uot sup- rt them, Members of the commitiees now re say, however, that if the compauny does Bot graat their requests they will carry tho gaatter up to their grand oficers.” Wil Sl plify Matters, At the ofice of General Traffic Manager Mollen it is tacitly admitted that the Union | A’acific contemplates withdrawing from the on, but it was L deficite action had . 1t was explained that the { 'ropoua withdrawal is merely for the pur- 6 of simplifying the offcial machinery, and will have no matorial effect. Notes and Personals, L. H. Korty, Union Pacific superintendent of telegraph, s 1n Chicago. B, A. Branch, represeuting the Erie, J. H Lattimer of the Nashvillo, Chattanoogn & St. Louis and B. J. Marks .of the Southern Pacific are in tho city. At the meeting of the ‘Pransmissourl Freight association in Kansas City Thursday a concession of great value to South Omatia packors was mado. At cortain seasons the agents of Omaha buyers go to the southwest for cattlo technically kuown as ‘‘canners,’ which are shipped by way of Kansas City, Herotofore tho proportional rato from that olnt to Omaha was §25 per car as against a ooal rate of 0, The proportional is now reduced to §20, —— A humorous fact wbout Hoods Sarsaparilla —it expels bad humor and croates g0od humor. Be sure to get Hood's, - - Dr. Cullimore, oculist, Bes building i Union sonp, manufactured in Neb. boriadid- o1kl Lively Times at the Inl. There must be merit in a medicine that has met with the success that the Bedal gold cure treatment at Blair has, The business has increased so rapidly that it has proven necessary to enlarge the quarters of that large plant. ‘whe rosult bas been a cure in every instance. Fifty pationts are being treated. The habits of liquor, morphine, opium and tobacco permanently cured. b it Any grocer can supply you with Quail rolled oats—delicious for breakfust. it Jack Dowling's Fl An fnsident occurred at Boyd's new theater Thursday evening which 1llustrates the rare honesty of a railroad man, and the fact is still more wonderful whon it is known that the hero 1s none other than the redoubtable Jack Dowling, city passenger agent of the Borlington. Mr. Dowling was witnessing Frederick Paulding’s great production of *“The Strugglo of Life,” and was sitting near a nicely dressed gentledan who left his seat before tho end of the play. Now, Jack 18 a man who doos not overlook much, and immediately aftor the stranger left, the lynx-oyed Jack espica a fat wallet lying under his seat. Inspection re- vealed that tho purse contained $210. Fol- lowing the Inclinations of his carly training the railroad man reported his find to the box oftice, and it was subsequontly callod for by B.*W. Browne, a traveling man from Cleve- land, O., who travels for the Great Westorn il Works. There was an affecting scono in tho lobby of the new Boyd when the railroad man and the drummer ombraced N, [a., April4, 1801, Doar Sir: Havo been troubled with catarrn in my hoad and throat for three years—at times was unable to spenk, had a constant ringing In_my ears and for tWwo years wks almost doaf, Have tried sov- oral so-called remedios and been troated by regular physicians and noted specialists, but failed to got any relief. I tried ono bottle of Moore’s Tree of Lifo Catarrh Cure. It gave immediate reliof and effectod o permanent cure, [heartily recommend it to all suffer- ors of this disense and will checrfully give any further information on being addressed at my home, No. 223 Sweenoy ave., Burling- ton, Ia. Ior sale by all druggists. Respectfullly, R. L. REip. e Be sure to try the Quail rolled oats and take no othel i L Union soap is home made. Semagian Among the Educators. Chancellor Canfield spent a part of yesterday with Superintendent Flitz- pattick. They are old acquaintan- ces, Mr, Fitzpatrick having beon one of tho board of rogents of the State University of Kansas when Mr. Canfield was chancellor of the said institution. ‘The architects of Omaha are responding to the advertisement of the Board of Education asking for propositions to do all the work of the board for the coming year. ey The People's Prefercnce, *“Tho people of this vicinity insist on hav- ing Chamberlain’s cough remedy and do not want any other,’ says John V. Bishop of Portland Mills, Ind. The reason’ is bocause they have found 1t superior to any other, especially for the grip and the cough which 50 often follows an attack of the grip. 25 and 50 cent bottles for sale by druggists. it S Every grocer handles Union soap. — Housekespers will flnd Quail rolled oats the best made. ————— Sneak Thieves Fined, Sol Metzner and Will King, the two youth- ful burglars who were arrestod Thursday for going through houses at which they roomed, were each fined $3) and costs by Po- lice Judge Berka yesterday. In default of payment of the find they were sent to jail, Morris Kopald, & youth who % as ulso mon- tioned in the arrost, was simply & witness in the case, as be bad been associating with tne other two, —_—— False Economy ispracticed by many people, who buy infer- jor articles of food because cheaper than sta ndard goods, _Surely infants are entitled to the best food obtainable. It is a fact that th e Gail Borden “Eagle” Brand Condensed Miik is the best infant food. Your grocer and druggist keep 1it. —_————— Ask your grocer tor Quail rolled oats. — Use Union soap. Use Union soap. —————— PERSONAL PARAGRAPIHS, @G. A, Bush of Lincoln s at the Dellonc M. H, Tilton of Lincoln is at the Murray. W. F. Wiley of Kearney is at the Paxton, E. N. Hale of David City is at the Arcade, Henry Rentlen of Talmage, Neb., 1s at the Millard, 8. E, Paxton, B, T, Hallett of Blair is stopping at the Paxton. L. R. Cottreli of Seward, Neb., is at the Arcade, M. L. Aitken of Lincoln was at the Millard yestorday, L. H, Guernsey of Hastings is registered at the Millard, T, J. Stapleton of Rio Janeiro is registered at the Arcade, M. O. Koith of North Platte is registered at tho Paxton, George S, Munson of Beatrice is registered at the Dellone, H. M. Jones of Lemars, Ia., Is registered at the Paxton, Alden Ferris of Elm Creek, Neb., is stop- ping at the Arcade. A. J. Kuhlman of Nebraska City was at the Murray yesterday. H. H. Robinson of Kimball, Neb., was at the Paxton yesterday. C. H. Davis and wife of Grand Island are stopping at the Dellone, John L Underwood, an insurance man of Lincoln, is at the Millard. H, Summers and wite of West Point were among the Nebraska arrivals yesterday at tho Paxton. Osgood of North Platto is at the DUN'S REVIEW OF THE WEEK In 8pite ‘of Much Dullness Trade is Grad- ually Enlarging. OMAHA'S PROSPECTS ARE EXCELLENT Spring Jobbing Trade Opens Well and in Many Regions Largely Exceeds That of Last Year—Western Busl- ness Leads. New Youk, Feb. 5 —R G. Dun & Co's wenkly roview of trade will say tomorrow : In spite of much dullness and complaint in some important branches trade is gradually enlarging. The east does not got the full benefit, hecanse western business is largely met by western distributing centers, and that alone 1s increasing heavily, while south- ern trado, which is more largely met by dis- tribution from the east, is unusually duil. But the wost is steadily increasing ordors for manufactured products, and is likely to buy more largely in the next five months than ever before. Eastern consumption is also fairly up to the maximum, as labor 18 well employed. T'he stringency atthe south, owing to the overproduction of cotton and hurtful speculation In the past, is at present the only force retarding the general improve- ment. Exports of merchandise continuo to greatly oxceed last yoar's for five months, at Now York by about 33 per cent, while in the value of imports the increase Is very shght. Favorable Reports of Business, Reports of business from cities are a shade more favorablo, At Boston the dry goods jobbing trade is quite good aud more orders for woolen goods, At Hartford larger sales of wool and fair trade in dry goods are re- ported. At Philadelphia more orders are seen for manufactured iron and incraased business in dry goods. At Cincinnati tobacco 18 active at good prices; dry gooas orders are brisk and building brospects tatterive. Cleveland reports improved trade with rolled Yruducls in large demand. Detroit reports January trade fully up to last voar’s. At Chicago sales of merchamdiso show a fair mcrease over last year and collections aro satisfactory ; receipts of flour, oats, rye, barley, lard and cheese show somo incroase, while wheat and corn have doubled, and re- ceints of drossed beef aro four times last years, but some decrease n‘»pem’ufl . cured meats, hides, wool and cattle. Open weather retards collections at Milwaukee, but trade 1s fair. At Louis business is not quite as strong, distribution being checked and stocked 1n tho cotton region. Omaha’s Trade Good., At Kansas City, Denver and Omaha trade is fair with good prospects; at St. Paul the spring jobbing trade opens well, and at Minneapolis largely exccods that of last year. At Now Orleans business is somewhat dull; cotton being lower with heavy receipts, but sugar is firm and rice in fair demand. At Savannah busiuess is better and money easier. Speculation in products has been more active, but in spite of the abundance of money the tendency of prices is lower. Wheat fell to 00%c here but recovered over lc, and after sales of 83,000,000 ba. is 1c lower than a week ago. Westorn receipts diminish but exports diminish still more. Corn closed only }gc higher after sales of 15,000,000 bu, “and oats fc higher, pork ' products are’ a shade Cotton is 1-16c lower for and Fevruary has sold below eceipts continue enormous. Oil has fallen 2 cents, but coffee is a fraction stronger. In lead trade is moderate and in tin tamo without change, but c)pper is weaker, Lako at $10. Silver has also fallen to about the lowest price ‘ever quoted, 41s Ga per ounce, recovering slightly to 41s 61gd. Considerable Progress Made, ‘The great industries make progress in spite of low prices and a production which scems to threaten attraction. Pig iron shows a little concession at £’hila- delphia and some shading hero by soutbern concerns and bar is as dull as ever with a light demand for plates. Structural iron 1s unsettled by the collapse of a steel beam combination and the price has fallen 2i§ conts. The coming expenditures by tho great railroads promise an unusual demand and news comes of the opening of additional furnaces. At the high price demanded by agents, coal is exceedingly dull. The boot and shoe busiuess is getting better with more orders, but in some cases prices are a shade lower, More activity is seen in dry goods and a large number of westeru buyers are doing a fair business. The demand for spring goods is growing but clothiers are still in the dark. Cottons are affected by the poor southern trade but prices of some prints and sheotings ‘have been advanced and orders for knit goods are fully as large as a year ago. The business failures occurring through- out the country during the last seven days number 319, as compared with 207 last weel. For the corresponding week last year the tigures were 306 BRADSTR] Indications of More Active Specalations in All Lines of Stock, New Yonk, Feb. 5.—Bradstreet's weekly Wall street roview says: Wall streetseemed during the past week to be losing belief in the proximity of a bull market. For some months past speculutive ovinion bas shown rare unanimity on that point. The material and economic facts were all interpreted as indicative of the approach of a wide, active and higher speculation in securities. The feature of this week’s markot is not found in the actual fluctuations of securitics, Prices bave been feverish rather than weak and unsettled speculative conditions were more noticeable than the actual declines. Tt would seem, however, that speculative in- terests have ‘awakencd to tho fuct that the condition of the foreign securities markot constitutes a tangible obstacle to the de- volopment of further improvement here and that from that quarter nas proceeded and is still proceeding the main pressure which has checked further improvement heve, Clearing Away of the Clouds. Under these circumstances the narrow and professional, but still inherent bullish, mar- kot Lias undergono & change of sentiment, involving a pretty general acknowledgment that speculative ‘developments here must bo precaded by a clearing awav of the clouds wrich hang over the great markets of Europe. Tho fact that on Friday tho reap- pearance of buymg for London account had considerable effect in sustaining prices, and even produced a vally, was considerod us significant on this point, ‘The London market shows, like our own, a plothora of idlo money, but this is appar- ently the result of timidity on the part of capital, It would, furthermoro, seem that there is a mass of undigested losses, particu- larly in connection with the so-called *‘in- vestment trusts,” lately so popular in Great Britain, The offect of this is seen in the continuance of enforced selling by foreign in- terests of holdings of American securities, to which may be mainly ascribed the steady, but otherivise inexplicable, rise in exchange rates which, itself, contributed to create an unsottled feeling in speculative circles, Speculative Shares Declined, 1t is accordingly natural that tho leading speculative shares should display declines @hring the weok, Louisvilio & Nashvillo falls ing from 74% to St. Paul from 50% 7515 and Atchison from 41% to 875, Bur- lington was freely sold. Ihe Vanderbilts D*PRICES am Baking - SPowder: Used in Millions of Homes--40 Years the Staudard, were dull and rathes heavy and the Gould stocks lacked su . thogh Manhattan re tained its strongtheand Western Unfon ad- vanced a little. ‘BH@ coal shares acted some- what independentiy, Reading rising (on the complotion of thePoughkeepsie bridge deal) And Lackawanna sévancing on manipulation. Among the specialties Consolidated Gas was conspicuous, The so-called “iadustrial” stocks were a foature of the weel's markot, and of them “Whisky” attracted the major sharo of at tention.” The wanipulation in_this case is of A very flagrant character. Tho annual re vort of the Natiows Cordage company did not have a ood oftdet on tho stock, which displayed a declinfg tendency. Chicago (Gas was aiso nctive and declined. TOTALS, e Growth of css, Especially for Omahn, New Youk, Feb. 5.—The foliowing table, compiled by Bradstreet's, gives the clearig louse returns for the week ending February 1, . and the porcentage of increaso or decrease, as compared with tho correspond- ing week lust year: ‘ 3 citins, New vorl Hoston.. Chioago Ehilndelphia. Springtield i Portland. Me 001191 | Salt Lake City, 81050 Fort Worth Doa M. i cles Wieh New Bedford.. ok nnak *Binghamton 1, United States. . New York......... Inion of Canad totals, Another Sneak Caught, An alleged sneak thief, known as Charles Parker, was arrested yesterday afternoon on tho charee of having stoleo an_overcoat ono weok ago from L. W. Reody of 318 North Sixteenth stroet. Parker, thy police claim, is_nothing more mor less thun an ordinary thief, and has done timo in states prison. He will be arraigned this mornin Look over. these symptoms: headache, ob- struction of nose, -discharges falling 'into throat — sometimes profuse, watery, and acrid, at others, thick, tenacious, muco purulent, bloody, putrid and offensive; weak, ringing in_cars, deafness; offensive breath; smell and taste {mpaired, and general debility. You won't havo all 'of thiem at once; probably only a few of them; but they mean Catarrh. And tho proprictors of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy mean to cure it, it youll let them, no maiter how bad or Low long standing! If they can't, they'll pay you $500 in cash. They mean that, too, just as it's printed. They offer you the money—or a cortain cure, if you'll take their mcdicine, But if they'weren't certain of the cure, thoy'd never offer you the maney, It 1s not to medals, badges or tue insignia of royal favor that the great- est of all speclalists, < DRS. BETTS & BETTS e their wonderful O i%and professio al popularity. They won their’ hon- ors by their merits. In the sclentific treatment and success® tul cure of over 86,000 cases of 'those NERVOUS, CHRONIC AND PRIVATE DISEASES which are so for midable to the medical profes: slon in general, DRS. BETTS & BETTS have proven that they possess extraordinary apllity and skill. 4 as well as Stric- ture, Hydrocele, Varicocele and Rectal /. troubles, their success " basbeen truly marvelous. are 8 of the high- Therefore, they entitled to wear the emblem | | @ they have y won by ! Send 4c for their new book of | 120 pages. Consultation is also | {ree. Call upon or addross witn | stamp. ‘ | | Drs, Brrps & Rarns | 119 S.14thSt, N, E. Coine Douglas St,, Omaha, Neb, l MILK CRUST 0N BABY Kept spreading until his facy was a raw sore. He scratched until blood ran. Best physicians said no ev ing. He was cored p Caticura, Bomething 0ver two yoars ago, our boy, then loss than one year 0id, was troubled with an eruption on his hend, pronounced by our best physiclans to be & case of “milk crust or Infantile ecremn.’ They also sald that 1t would be tmpossible to cure 1t until after ho had finfshed teething, This malady keptsproading until his face was & raw sore, and every few days he would draw his finger natls down on both ch yving thy scabs, and the bl running diwn on his chin made him pro ehastly sight. We commenced using the CUTICURA nder ment, and In two months his face was 1 fair, and has t Wo unhostitingly glve all eredit to Ct O B, WILLIAMS, Fort Dodge, Scaly Humor 17 years 1. was afliictod for seventeer and blotehy humor over n yoars with o scaly ny entire broast. At times A tetal and to n sfaction. 1 was cured with one set of CUTICUIRA REMEDIES, ALOUL Lwo And o half wi That has be WO yeurs 8ince, and no sy mptoms of JACOR 1 10 Palm Street, St. Louls, Mo, n “im oxq reliove i the &kin, sea infancy to age, fr the Porr Boston " Gh pages led ur ‘ ations, and 100 testimon free. PIMELES, black hoads, red, rough. andoily skin cured by C Do you know that a littlo Cough » a dangerous thing ? DOCTOR { Will Stop a Cough at any tim, fand Cure the worst Cold i itwelve hours. A 25 Cent bottl may save you $100 in Doctor” bills—may save your life, ASE YOUR DRUGGIST FOR IT. IT TASTES GOOD. Dr, Acke:"s English Pill CURE II:IVDIGES’I‘H)N. v Kuhn & Co., and Sherman & McConnell, Omaha. To promote health, preserveand length- en life, stimulate and invigorate the whole system, tone the stomach, aid digestion, create an appetite and repair the waste tissues Wof the lungs, i nothing surpasses # an absolutely pure whiskey of deli- cious flavor, smooth to thetaste, mellow, mature and of richest qual- ity. inferior whiskies it will not rasp or scald the throat and stomach. Call for CREAM PURE RYE and take no other. For sale only at high-class liquor and drug stores. DALLEMAND & CO., CHICAGO. o FOR i COXSUMPT]\' [ witaoms Cod Liver Oil and Lime, 1t is worthy of all confldence. It cures Consump fon, Couaghs, Colds, Asthma, Pneumonia, Influenza, Bronchitis, Debil- ity, Wasting Diseases and Scrofulous Humors, Bosure, as you value your health, and get the genuine, s base Imitations sald 1o be'good as WYILBOH’ COD LIVER OIL & PHOSPHATES pted to be substituted by aro wtte donlors, this p wend dl ., ¢ The Most Effecvtie Tonic in LA GgIPPE Ducro’s Alimentary Eixir, /This preparation strikes at the seat of the evll by restorlng quickly &nd effectually the nutriivo functions of the debilitated ystom principled Virtiics of paration. ot 10 A Manuf Sold by All Druggists, B, FOuU 7o, 28 &l AllanLin BOYAL MAIL STEAMERS. B4l regularly during winter from PORTLAND to LIVERPOOL Dircct. 1RA & OO, Ag ) North Willtain St (S STIRAMSHLES and Glaskow Fortaightly abin 82, Steorage $10. Apply 150 1L B8 MD)L%4, Wabvih a Tieka: O { ALLLAN LI FPENNTROYAL PILLS ADIES, Mk SANDALWOOD CAPSULES ‘aro the lans for cure of Gon »rrtie and 4 arges {eam the UFINAFY Orgaas; Vervst chave 4o b duya oL per & All drugglals Odd Suit Pants. This week we hold our regular semi-ane nual sale of ail the odd suit pants that have ac= cumulated during the past season. This an= nouncement will be read with pleasure by hundreds of our customers, many of whom have allowed the fringe at the bottom of their ! pants to form itself into a graceful paiv of lame brequins while waiting tor it. This sale is as different from the ordinary pant sale as black is from white. We buy no pants for it. We put r_)_(lpzlnls in it from x‘e'g-‘-u_lur stock at regular, marked up or marked down priCLm simply lay aside all the pants that accumulate from suits to muml-, where only the coats and vests have been sold, for a whole season, when we sort them into different lots, mark a pric on them and put them on sale. At the prices we make on them they go witha rush. We are never compelled to mark them down a second time to dispose of them. The sale this time com= prises something like two thousand pairs of pants, mostly from fine suits, as itis seldom we have to break a cheap suit. At $1.50 At $2.80 S Hundreds of pairs of pants, in all wool and silk and wool cassimeros, cheviots, ete., worth from $2.50 to $3. Over nine hundred pairs of pants, comprising worsteds, all wool and silk and wool cassimeres, cheviots, tweeds, worth from four to five dollars. As many pants in this lot are from fourteen and fifteen dollar suits, you can judge how cheap the pantsare at two fifty. Pants in beautiful goods, meltons, cheviots, tweeds, all wool, simeres, silk and wool cassimeres, homespuns, fine teds, ete. Many a pair in this lot worth seven dollars At $3.80 At $4.50 Inthese four lots youcan find almost any color, style or pattern you happen to want. WO The very finest kinds of pants, $20, 822 and $25. you up to $8. Pants left from suits a$ Pants that in a regular way would cosé Lor -DQUGLAS & 4 s AN ACSTRIAN NEALTH FACTORY. BY MARK TWAIN. LEANNESS, FATNESS AND ALL THE REST. The Sunday Bee. | GOLD MEDAL, PABIS, 1673, W. Baxer & Co.: Breakfast Cocoa from which the excess of oil Lias been removed, 18 Absolutely Pure and it {8 Soluble. No Chemicals are used in its preparation, It has wmore than three timea the strength of Cocoa mixed with Starch, Arrowroot or Sugar, and is therefore far more economical, costing less than one cent @ cup. It is delicious, nourishing, strengthening, EASILY DIGESTED, and admirably adapted for invalids as well as for persons in health, Sore T hroai: Lameéness Sore Ey Soren % Piles & Female (:)« Cat Bruyj B Cu Complaints Rheumatism AND ALL Inflammation Sid only 10 our owa bot'les. All druggists. POND'S EXTRACT CO,,76 5th Ave,, NoYs Sold by Orn}cprl overywhere. W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass. —V—v E; K atp " UNDEVELOP Conditiona of the 10 develop, Btreikti undeveloped, foeble wh . M. HENDERSON, Elstablished 1874, COMMISSION MERCHANT, Grain, Seeds, and Provisions. Nos. 2 and 4 Sherman 8t., Rooms 68 & 69. CHICACO, v t-oluss factiition for the Landling of shipiments inn uodn: oo of Grain, Fleld und 1 ences orn Kachauge and Awmericen Exchaige Notiona) Banks a8e8, 0) ioro la one mpthe hich tila sy he' Rocompll a1 y rmn. produced u cully, ere 10" matral oy ‘ ‘l‘l‘luuln l(-[lllnm:lv 140 1110 Qunoks propus Cilo"wume. & TN VERTT tom, proofs, references, ete. calod lettof without ooat OF why Bl RIB WEDIOAL 0., BUFFALO, N.

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